Tuesday, Qgichar
THE DAILY TAR wppt
btimts
Claude C. Shotts, general sec
retary of theTuniversity.YMCA,
was elected chairrnan of the
Southeastern Regional Execur
tive Committee of the American
Friends Service Committee at 4
meeting held in High Point last
week. He has been a member of
the executive committee since
1947. Previous to that year Mr.
Shotts held various executive
positions with the Friends, ' in
cluding direction of relief work
in Germany for two years fol
lowing World War II.
The AFSC Southeastern Re
gional Office, located in High
Point, is one of eleven regional
divisions of Friends in the Unit
ed States. The thirty-man
executive committee is a sub-l-committee
of the Board of Di
rectors of the national office in
Philadelphia and responsible
for activities in six southeastern
states. -
Work Directed
Its staff of seven people direct
work in the fields of peace edu-
Meet Me Tonite
at jrhe
- 1 "-lor i
Pizza, Boasf Beef
cation, merit employment, col
lege efforts, school integration,
the interpretation of Friends'
concern for human suffering and
conflict in Our present world.
The office also maintains ' a
clothing center and takes an ac
tive part in Friends' relief
work wherever there is human
need.
Shotts recently returned from
Chicago where he attended the
Conference on Education
Abroad. He is , director of the
Seminars Abroad program of
the campus YMCA.
The Chicago conference was
called by the American Asso
ciation of Colleges, the Institute
of International Education and
the Experiment in International
Living." More than 300 colleges
having programs of undergradu
ate education abroad sent repre
sentatives as well as a number
of foreign universities and other
educational agencies from the
United States -and abroad.
Programs Vary
"Foreign educational pro
grams in the different colleges
vary," Shotts said on his return
to Chapel Hill, "from summer
seminars and exchange pro
grams to Junior Year Abroad
and from a small number of
students in some colleges to a
whole class in Others. Foreign
study is 'made attractive to stu
dents and to many of our over
crowded colleges because it
costs no more for professors
and students to go abroad for
a year than if "would to' remain
on campus in American schools."
Experiences at Carolina in
education 'abroad include the
Goettingen Exchange Program
which was initiated in 1954 and
Seminars Abroad which began
in 1957. During the past year 54
students took part in the Euro
pean phase of Seminars Abroad
by spending two months in
travel and seminars in seven
countries of western Europe.
fa ffte
The YW-YMCA Committee
for Foreign Student Work will
hold a supper meeting at 5:30
p.m. tonight in the upstairs room
of Lenoir Hall.
The 2nd Chancellor's Recep
tion for new faculty members,
scheduled for Thursday eve
ning, has been cancelled due to
the conflict with the Kennedy
Nixon debate.
The U.P. will" meet at 7:30
tonight in Gerrard Hall. The
convention will be a member
ship kickpff drive, and an in
troduction to the party and its
work.
NOT A SIGN. OF-A SLIP-UP!
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ACH0S3
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potter'a
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21. Celebes " .
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24. Tavern
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The S.P. will meet at 7:30
tonight in Roland Parker I and
II.
The Elisha Mitchell Scientific
Society will meet at 7:30 to
night in 265 Phillips Hall. Mem
bers are asked to note the
change of meeting room. 265 is
in the west end of the new wing
of Phillips. ,'
The Chapel Hill Alliance
Francaise will meet at 8 p.m.
tonight at the University Metho
dist Church Fellowship Hall.
"Students for Kennedy" will
hold an organizational meeting
at 7:30 tonight in Roland
Parker III." " f.
The Executive Board of the
YWCA will meet in the Y to
day at 4:30' p.m. The YWCA
Cabinet will meet in the Y t
p.m.
The GJrJ jScout Committee of
the YWCA will meet today at 4
p.m. in the Y committee room.
All interested students are
urged to attend.
The Graduate Club Executive
Council will meet at ,6 p.m. to
night in the upstairs dining area
of Lenoir Hall.
Today
WTVD, CHANNEL 11
4:00 Brighter Day
4:15 Secret Storm
4:30 Edge of Night
5:00 American Bandstand
5:30 Rin Tin Tin
6:00 Dennis the Menace
6:30 Your Esso Reoorter
6:40 Weather
6:45 Doug Edwards and the News
7:00 'Adventures in Paradise
8:00 My Three Sons
8:30 Many Loves of Dobie Gil f is
9:00 Tom Ewell f
9:30 Red Skelton '
10:00 Garry Moore
11:00 Phillips 66 News
HJL5r First Run Theater: "Treasure pf the
-auty JUlls"
WpAL, CHANNEL
4:00 Make Room for Daddy
ere's Hollywood-
5:00 Cap'n 5 . !
5:30 Quick Draw McGraw
6:00 Cap'n 5 ,
6:10 Stateline
6:25 Weather
6:30 Reeve
6:45 NBC News
7:00 Lock Up
7:30 Laramie
8:30 Alfred Hitchcock f resents
9;00-rThri.!ie .
10:00 Donald O'Connor Show (color)
11:00 Dateljne
11:10 Sporisline
11:15 Jack Paar '
it n
Smithsonian
Treasury of
cieflCQ
Handsome three volume set,
covering almost every field of
scientific knowledge, in fifty
articles by some of the world s
foremost authorities. j
Until Ghristmas $12.95
After Christmas $15.03
SEE IT TODAY AT
THE INTIMATE
x GODKSHOP
C 119 'East raHklU Street
Chapel Hili. N. C.
Open"4 Till '10
Sea Animals Are Compared
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PRIVATE ENTERPRISE
COLUMBUS, Miss. (UPI)
Frank Owen is a professional
grasshopper collector.
The seven-year-old boy pack
ages the insects in paper cup:;
and sells them to girl zoology
students at the Mississippi State
College for Women.
CLASSIFIED AD
I.Q. IN LIFE INSURANCE
means Investment Quotient
what you get for what you pay
in premiums. Northwestern Mu
tual leads all others in I.Q. Ar
thur DeBerry, Jr., C.L.U., Tel.
9-3691.
WILL THE PERSON WHO
borrowed my London Fog rain
coat and umbrella from Lenoir
Hall, Sat. 1 P.M., please call
John Phillips, 8-9090, or Llewel
lyn Phillips, Sigma Nu House.
Generous reward.
,
Y"
A LOOK AT FISH TUMORS
Noted German animal physiologist, Dr.
Carl Schlieper, inspects the results of
the use of scientific apparatus on the
physiology of fish tumors in the labora
tory of Dr. Douglas Humm, associate
professor of the department of zoology
at the University of North Carolina.
Pictured . left to right are: Dr. Humm,
Dr. Schlieper, Dr. Humm's assistant?,
Avis Sylvia, and graduate student, Tully
Turney. -
The first book in the Library
of the first state university, the
University of North Carolina,
was "The worics or tne ugnx
Reverend Father in God Thom
as Wilson, D.D., Lord Bishop of
Scdor and Man."
Salt,
Water
Content
Am
Obi
Baltic,
Ml
3
antic
Tests' feinc
n n 1 B B
mmusus
By NANCY VON LAZAR
Scallops -and mussels- in the
Baltic Sea and in the Atlantic
Ocean are being compared to
one another to note how they
resist changes in the salt con
tent of the water and . water
temperature. ' :
The study is being conducted
by Dr. Carl Schlieper, of the
Institute fur Meereskunde, of
the University of Kiel, Ger
many. This is the only institute
of oceanography in Germany.
Dr. Schlieper is visiting the
zoology department here.
Three Seminars
Dr. Schlieper is giving three
seminars on "Ecological Physio
logy of ; Brackish : Water Ani-
String Quarb
Begins Season
The University String Quar
tet will open its ninth season
tonight at 8 in Hill Hall.
Dr. Edgar Alden and his wife,
Dorothy," will be heard playing
first violin and viola, rsepec
tively. Jean Heard will be sec
ond violin, and ' Mary Gray
Clarke will play the cello.
Dr. Alden is a professor in
the music department. Mrs.
Heard is the wife of the Dean
of the Graduate School, Dr.
Alexander Heard. Miss Clarke is
a graduate assistant in the
School of Music.
mals."
He is an outstanding research
ist in the general field of ani
mal physiology." His laboratory
in Kiel is located on the Baltic
Sea, and his particular study
is devoted to the " effects of
changing temperatures and sa
linities on the animal population
of the sea. 'His findings include
data gathered from the Atlantic
coast of the-United States where
the temperature range is much
greater than that of the more
constant temperature of the
Baltic Sea.
Temperatures Studied
The three temperature ranges
studied were at Woods Hole,
Cape Cod; Beaufort, N. C; and
in the Florida Keys. The sub
ject of investigation was mul
lusks. It was found that the
scallop is not as resistant to
changes in salinity and tem
perature as, for example, the
common American oyster which
is extremely resistant and which
can exist in low salinity with
high or low temperature. In the
cool Baltic Sea, the oyster can
resist dilution of the sea
water, but not if the tempera
ture is raised. .
s In addition to Dr. Schlieper's
investigations in change' of tem
perature and salinity, Professor
C. E. Jenner, chairman of the
department of zoology here, is
investigating the effects of light
on aquatic life.
7yake A Date wjth
A Steak Tonight
at the "
2--
TABLE SERVICE FROM
5-12 P.M.
Used Books for
Happy Reading
Newsstand Paperbacks We buy
em for four cents each, and
sell 'em three for a quarter.
Where else can you rent read
ing for only 4c per book, no
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Oualitv Parhaclrs We have
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clllh rhnifPC anrl thp nrifPS run
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IF YOU MUST KILL TIME,
- LET IT DIE HAPPY. IN
THE INTIMATE
BOOKSHOP
119 East Franklin Street
Open Till 10 P.M.
pffiixiifpfiniDfi yo)iifn)
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xrr S YX': - -l
f MK-Uf.jr tj, .manwrtA.
trn. CCT. 21. at 8:30 PtA at VILL1AM NEAL RF7N0LDS COLISEUM,
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licketS: $2.ro,'$2.50; $3.00, $3.50 -
WOW CN SALE Raleigh? Coliseum Box Office, William Neal Reynolds, N.C. State
College. TE 2-0523; MVomtsie's Inc., HI wt Hargell St. Downtown Raleigh:
Kerr Rexall Drugs, Cameron Village, Raleigh; Chapel Hills Sloan Drug Co., 101
E. Franklin St, 8455; Durham: Walgreen Drug store 102 w,Majn st., 58241.
WAIL 4CJ5DER: Wake jchecks-payable to ''Coliseum Box Office" William Neat
Reynolds, N.C. State Colleger Raleigh. Enclose stamped self-addressed en
tefepe. UmiCHT-SAWCON FSOOUCTION .
Delegates-
(Continued from page 1)
and Grigg.
"It was impossible to choose
everyone who was qualified to
go.. I would highly recommend
that all those who applied and
are interested in the program
to help entertain the Toronto
visitors on the campus," Grigg
said.
eliminated this year to apply
for the delegation again next
year," Grigg said.
"The main purpose of the
program I think is the exchange
of ideas through social, sports
and special speakers contacts.
While it is a cultural exchange,
it is not necessarily an alto
gether intellectual one," Grigg
said.
"Each delegate will have one
person assigned to him to 'look
after him' during the visit, but
all activities will be conducted
on the group idea," Grigg said.
7
a .j T" a m
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ROCK HILL, S. C.
111 t(iT3 i
with
0!
(Author of VI Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many
Loves of Dobie Giilis", etc.)
'HOME SWEET HOMECOMING"
A great number of people have been asking me lately, "What
is Homecoming?" but I have been so busy trying to find out
why my new sports car leaks that I haven't had time to answer.
I am now pleased to report that I finally discovered why my
sports car leaks -J Jiave been' 'Atvxpft it 'upside down and so
I am ready today to turn my attention to Homecoming.
Let's begin with definitions. Homecoming is a weekend when
old grads return to their alma maters to watch a football game,
visit old classrooms and "dormitories and inspect each other's
bald spots.
The weekend is marked by the singing of old songs, the slap
ping of old backs and the frequent exchange of such greetings
as "Harry, you old polecat!" or "Harry, you old porcupine!"
or "Harry, you old rooster!" or "Harry, you old wombat!"
As you can see, all old grads are named Harry.
It is not just'old grads who behave with such liveliness during
Homecoming; the faculty also comports itself with unaccus
tomed animation. Teachers laugh and smile and pound backs
and keep shouting "Harry, you old Airedale!" Thii 13 cholarly
behavior is carried on in the hope that old grads, in a transport
of bonhomie will endow a new geology building.
The old grads, however, are seldom seduced. By game time
on Saturday their backs are so sore, their eyeballs so eroded,
their extremities so frayed, that it is impossible to get a kind
word out of them, much less a new geology building.
r - 1 a
vv .
ny V,
Even the football game does not improve their tempers.
."Hmmph!" they snort as the home team completes a 101-yard
march to a touchdown. "Do you call that football? Why, back
in my day, they'd have been over on the first down! By
George, football was football in those days not this namby
pamby girls' game that passes for football today! Take a look
at that bench 50 substitutes sitting there. Why, in my day,
there were 11 men on a team and that was it. When you broke
a leg, they slapped a piece of tape on it and you went right back
in. Why, I remember the big game against State. Harry Siga
foos, our star quarterback, was killed in the third quarter. I
mean, he was pronounced dead. But did that stop old Harry?
Not on your tintype! Back in he went and kicked the winning
drop kick in the last four seconds of play, dead as he was. Back
in my day, they played football, by George !"
Everything, say the old grads, was better back in their day
everything except one. Even the most unreconstructed of the
old grads has to admit that back in his day they never had a
smoke like Marlboro never a cigarette with such a lot to like
never a filter so easy drawing, a flavor so mild yet hearty, so
abundant, so bountiful never a choice of flip-top box or soft
pack.
So old grads, young grads, and undergrads, why don't j-ou
settle back and have a full-flavored smoke? Try Marlboro, the
filtered cigarette with the unaltered taste, and Homecoming
will be a happy occasion and the sun will shine and the air will
be filled with the murmur of wings and no man's hand will be
raised against you.
. I960 Mm Shulmao
At Homecoming time -or any time try Marlboro's unal
tered companion cigarette mild, flavorful Philip Morris...
Regular size or king size Commander a brand new and happ'j
experience iftsmQking! UacsaCommander-riclconieahoari:!