Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 26, 1971, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Daily Tar Heel Monday. April 26, 1971 By biology laboratories PDoteioifi - control being by Brad Stuart Staff Writer Finding methods of controlling human and animal population is the purpose of UNC Laboratories of Reproductive Biology, directed by Dr. H. Stanley Bennett. Work was begun in the laboratories in 1969 with the aid of a Rockefeller Foundation grant. Bennett sees the key to population control in the increase of the basic understanding of reproductive processes, f "If soemthing is not done very promptly, we will face a world-wide UNG pharmacists honored i A number of top awards for exceptional service to pharmacy were presented to staff members of UNC School of Pharmacy at the 91st Annual Convention of the North Carolina Pharmaceutical Association in Durham. I Dr. George P. Hager, dean of the School, was recognized for his devoted and exceptional meritorious service to the advancement of public health and welfare ROAST BEEF DINNER MON. W 2 Vegs & Rolls BBQ CHICKEN W 2 Vegs & Rolls tUES. CHOPPED SIRLOIN W7 Mushroom Sauce W 2 Vegs & Rolls WED. BBQ PORK RIBS THURS. W2 Vegs & Rolls FILET OF FLOUNDER W 2 Vegs & Rolls Or ROAST BEEF ON BUN W 2 Vegs & Rolls FRI. !' -i v - .,-.,. .-c a. Selection Served With i is5 .v&-,if 1 fK liifeio catastrophe," Bennett warns. The laboratories do not develop contraceptives but the discoveries made in their labs may provide bases for the development of new contraceptives or other methods for reducing the birth rate. Thus, the work done by the laboratories are in the area of theoretical research and pure science, rather than applied science. Bennett feels the research in reproduction may bring improvements not only in population limitation but also in pest and pollution control, animal . with emphasis on highly successful drug abuse information programs. Jesse M. Pike, Jr., director of the School's Student-to-Student Drug Abuse Program was awarded a certificate of appreciation for his leadership in bringing pharmacy students to secondary and junior high schools throughout the state in drug abuse information programs. Over LUNCHEON SPECIAL 11:30-2:30 97t Soup & Sal2d$130 0 1 v li . i f i 7 1 . v.'- . 'i'y -' '-:-: - 7;rv :;.i- i-v.. '. . . .. i-'-ii. 'rc '- husbandry, agriculture, medicine, public health and other fields. Specific studies in the Chapel Hill labs are in the areas of hormones, neurological controls and gametes. Dr. Walter Stumpf, associate professor of anatomy and pharmacology, directs a laboratory studying the relationship of hormones to the nervous system and reproductive functions. Using radioactive tracing of the hormones, Stumpf has discovered that sex hormones bind to certain neurons (nerve cells) not previously thought to play a direct role in reproduction. Stumpf has found a wide distribution of sexually 50,000 students have been reached by this group since September. At the convention Dean Hager reported on the School's activities during the past year. Professor Claude U. Paoloni spoke on pharmacy education; Assistant Dean - David R. Work reported on procedures for drug third party payments; and Robert J. Allen, an instructor in Clinical Pharmacy spoke on "Pharmacy Practice in a Community Health Clinic." Professor Paoloni, director of Pharmacy School InternExtern program, presented certificates of superior performance to the following UNC graduates: Miss Joyce B. Long of Rockingham; Daniel J. Yates of Durham; Mrs. Judith K. Coan of Chapel Hill. Assistant Dean LeRoy D. Werley Jr. represented the School of Pharmacy on; the Executive Committee of the 1971; N.C.Ph.A. convention committee. i William Shakespeare's v No wander CommonwHth United pnstrta Ptef SnHI production I narirnn Hocrnn. aenn fA)MAVlSrONTeotor by TECHNICOLOR rah-asod ;fcNOW PAYING 1250i'2:50-4:505Q:ii; iRhooiKKQornexois! FIR9T PRIZ 5Q 9COMD PRiZgy .1.1. l,I.UULJ!;;l....-mr..m--IMi.....M. .....L.UI:J.I..-..JIU JU,. L:;l. ...II. I 1. .1 Ul, l JIIIM,.....!. ,,.., Kl . . . ,,, llll.l, , Ulll , .ILII.,.1 II KM L .11. .. 2 HlnG TfcnHOT P1nTs &71 BUR Of SOiCUL0O6'MnivaS 50 THIRD PRI29 Could you be walking around on the Great Gams of 1971? Could yours be the great-looking legs worth $2,500 cash, for your education or whatever else you please? Could you be one of the 50 co-eds (one from each state) whose legs win you Second Prize, two great hot pants outfits by Hang Ten2 plus a pair of Scholl Exercise Sandals to keep those gorgeous gams in shape? , Runners-up from each state get Third Prize, a pair'of Scholl Exercise Sandals. Limber up those legs, gals. Go get the details at your Scholl Sandal display in local department, shoe or drug stores. If you're not ready to put your legs on the line, get yourself a pair of Schoil Fxprri:f Sandals the ones with th hvHmcIuh tne-oriD. the ..v.v..w 1 ' ...... w niui ' ( super-comfortable sandals that help shape up your legs while you walk. CONTEST RULES: Send printed name, home address, signature and fuM-figure photo to Scholl Great Gams Contest, Box 812. Times Squa'e Station. New York, New York 10036. Entries must be costntarked no later trai midnign!. July 31, 1971. Only girls enroled full- or part-time in art accredited two- or tour-year college or university or 1971 graduates thereof) will te eligiSie. Winners wiii be chosen ty an independent and impartial group of judges. Judges' decision wiii be final. All prizes wHf be awarded. No purchase required. Void where prohibited by law. All pictures submitted become the property cf The Schoii f.Vg. Co.. Inc., and cannot be returned. Your signature indicates that you have read and under stand the rules of this contest. ; stadied. active neurons in the brain, which was thought to have only two main "sex centers." Stumpf believes these neurons have important controlling roles in reproductive behavior and physiology. Dr. Peter Petrusz, who will arrive from Stockholm this summer, will conduct studies on the chemical transmission of information between one part of the brain to centers controlling release of hormones controlling the sx glands. Laboratory investigators are studying properties and functions of the sperm, including capacitization, the increase of the sperms' fertilizing capacity as it ascends the female reproductive tract. Bennett hopes to be able to prevent capacitization at will, to provide a new contraceptive method. Membrane study in gametes may also aid in contraceptive development. Bennett is studying fusion and recombination of membranes, processes which occur in fertilization and development. Ways to interfere with these processes are being sought. Dr. Keiji Marushige, assistant professor of biochemistry, directs a laboratory in the molecular control of genes and the role genes play in cell specialization. Large samples of animal gametes are hard to obtain and preserve, so Dr. Malcolm Brown is developing methods for culturing certain plants with similar male gametes to obtain these large amounts. Bennett explained, 'The more we study plant and animal gametes, the more alike they seem." Because the population problem has reached crisis proportion, Bennett feels present methods for reducing the birth-rate should be used extensively, while new research and new technology is being developed. Caesar... No greater cast! - g)0 nnhornc . innn mpicmn by AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL Pielum tt J OUTFIT - . ... - (Theatre a Board will govern Toronto Exchange The Toronto Exchange will be directed next year by a governing board instead of the customary two chairmen. The board will consist of Jimmy Bart el, Celia Benton. Susan Oldham. Carolyn Ross and Britt Nicholson. Chairmen win be Vincent Kopp and Edith Davis. The Toronto Exchange is a program in which 30 UNC students travel to the University of Toronto and spend a week there. Thirty University of Toronto students reciprocate and visit Cupel Hill for a week. Now in its 1 1th year, the program was initiated under the patronage of President William C. Friday of UNC and President Bissell of the University of Toronto. 'Spring thing' sale to begin Wednesday The Kappa Alpha Theta pledge class will be selling "spring things' beginning Wednesday, April 28. The pledge class project includes the selling of water guns, 35 cents; punch balls, 50 cents; and bubble blower mixture, 25 cents; Those who want to make advance orders should call Linda Ketner, 933-1808, or call the Theta house at 968-9398. Theta pledges will be selling the items during Jubilee. Pence talk keynotes speech festival today A two-day Speech Festival begins today with a speech by Dr. James W. Pence, assistant professor in the UNC Speech Division. The festival is open to the public. Pence's speech, "The Rhetoric of Bernadette Devlin," is 8 p.m. in 103 Bingham Hall. "Oratory in the New South and the Old South Contrasted" is the topic of a talk by Dr. Waldo Braden, chairman of the Speech Department at Louisana State r '-,. y .t, Visit the future where Starring Robert Duva!! and Donald Pieasence First Time in the Carolinas CAM V0 IBIl 50,000 baby seals were killed in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and over half a million seals were clubbed, speared, shot, gaffed during the 1970 Canadian-Norwegian slaughter in the Atlantic. Don't believe furriers who would persuade you that Friends of Animals has been "misleading" you, that any slaughter anywhere is done for the benefit of the seals. I, Alice Herrington, testify that on March 21, 1970-the second day of the Canadian season on seals I saw the same brutal massacre against which Friends of Animals, of which I am president, has been protesting for years. As the bubble-domed helicopter flew low over the first day's kill, I saw mother seals nuzzling the skinless corpses of their babies. Standing ten feet away from the killers on the ice floes, twenty miles out in the Gulf, I saw baby seals, clubbed twjee, raise their heads as they were sliced open. Other babies were battered as many as fourteen times while the mothers watched in terror and stress. If You Are One Who Cannot Be Indifferent to the Suffering of Other Creatures YOU CAN HELP FIRST by refusing to garb yourself in the agony of another, by refusing to buy the skins of wildlife. SECOND-by causing this advertisement to be inserted in your local newspaper. (A mat will be sent upon your request to Friends of Animals. See coupon.) THIRD-by sending a tax-deductible contribution to Friends of Animals, lnc.-a non-profit organization that intends to pound on the world's conscience until sentient men and women everywhere are made aware of the unnecessary cruelty and destruction bing inflicted upon animals. Your contribution will be used to plead for those creatures who cannot speak for themselves but who dumbly implore your.pily. For further information, call 929-3504. FRIENDS OF ANIMALS, INC. 11 West 60th Street New York. N.Y. 10023 D Enclosed is my tax -deductible contribution to help stop the slaughter of marine mammals. Please add my name to your mailing list. Send me a mat of this advertisement so that I can place this advertisement in my local paper at my own expense (also tax deductible). NAME. ADDRESS. 9 1 1 University. Braden will speak at 2 p.m. Tuesday in 103 Bingham. Two sessions cf pre-selected'snident speeches will be presented at 4 ani? p.m. Tuesday m 101 Greenlaw. Braden wiH serve as a critic at both. Author or co-author of eight books. Braden is best known for his "Speech Criticism.' He also has written numerous articles for speech and history journals. He has served as executive secretary and president of the Speech Association America. and president of the Southern Speech Association. From 1965-67, he edited ""Speech Teacher." Former SG candidate voted NCSL treasurer Jim Flynt, former candidate for student body president, was elected treasurer of the North Carolina Student Leaislature (NCSL) for 1971-72. On Sunday, NCSL held an interim council meeting in the Carolina Union. Representatives from Atlantic Christian College, Technical Institute of Alamance, Duke University, UNC. Greensboro College, UNC-G, Methodist College, St. Andrews College, N.C. State. Meredith, and Kittrel College attended. Permission required for writing courses Instructor's permission will . be required before enrollment in some creative writing courses next fall. Others will be open without permission. Students interested in taking English 34P under Wallace Kaufman and William Harmon, 35P under Carolyn Kizer, 34F under Doris Betts and 35F under Max Steele should see the particular professor in Greenlaw before May 6 pre-registration. Instructors may require the student to turn in a manuscript. All other 34F courses will be open without permission. USE T CLASSIFIEDS love is the ultimate crime. SHOWS: 1-3-5-7-9 ."DKIMPPrJEEN 1 I "I I I CITY- STATE- .ZIP. .I : - '
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 26, 1971, edition 1
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