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April1 & 1561:
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
"3 A
CLASSIFIED-ADS
FORD, 1960, SIX, STANDARD,
shift, clean, one- owner,- radio,
heater, padded dash, white
walls, two-tone. Excellent gas
mileage. Only $1595. Call 968
1317. .
FOR SALE: 1957 MGA. RED,
sood top. radio, heater, wire
wheels. Excellent mechanical
condition. Sacrifice price, $1050.
Call 942-4331.
APPLIES FOR U.S. VISA
RIO DE JANEIRO (UPD
Capt. Henrique Galvao, who hi
jacked the- Portuguese1 cruise
liner Santa Maria in January,
has applied for a visa- to visit
the United States. U.S7 consul
Benjamin Hilliard said the re
quest has been referred to
Washington. Galvao said He
hoped to conduct a fund-raising
drive for his campaign to- oust.
Portuguese Premier Antonio
Salazar.
iAutkor of VI Was a Teen-age Ehearf', VTke Many
Lotes of Dobie GiUis", etc.)
HAPPINESS CANT BUY MONEY
WMl tuition costs spiralling ever upward, more and moreimder
Suates are -investigating, the student loan plan . TSre
one who is considering the "Learn Now, Pay Later"s m vm
wouW do well.first to study the case atlJrid. slgaW'
JZlAl l'ait UphoJsterer in Straitened Circum
stances, Idaho, had lus heart set on going to college, butihre
tJES t?' hlS P. alas, not
jnZPJ? Z rrdflani1Urand he could finish the
fe page of Ins te the Regents had dosed their brief easel
scliobrship, but he had,, alas, only a single athletic skills
balancing a stick on his chin-and this, alas, aiooTonly
pasag enthusiasm among the coaches awa
i y t
And then, huzzah, Leonid learned of the student Ioa plan:
he could borrow money for his tuition and repay it m easy
monthly installments after he left school !
Happily Leonid enrolled in the Southeastern Idaho College
of Woodpulp and Restoration Drama and happily began a
college career that grew more happy year by year. Indeed, it
became altogether ecstatic in his senior year because Leonid met
a coed named Salina T. Nem with hair like beaten gold and
eyes like two squirts of Lake Louise. Love gripped them in its
big moist palm and they were betrothed on the Eve of St. Agnes.
Happily they made plans to be married the day after com
mencement plans, alas, that never were to come to fruition
because Leonid, alas, learned that Salina, like himself, was in
college on a student loan, which meant that he had not only
to repay his own loan when he left school but also Salina's, and
the job, alas, that was waiting for Leonid after graduation at
the Boise Raccoon Works simply did not pay enough, alas, to
cover both their loans, plus rent and food and clothing.
Sick at heart, Leonid and Salina sat down and lit fariboro
Cigarettes and tried to find an answer to their problem and,
pure enough, they did ! I do not know whether or not Mhrlboro
Cigarettes helped them find an answer; all I know is that
Marlboros taste good and look good, and when things close hv
and a feller needs a friend and the world is black as the pit from
pole to pole, it is a heap of comfort and satisfaction to be sure
that Marlboros will always provide the same unflagging pleas
ure, the same unstinting quality, in all times and climes and
conditions. That's all I know.
Leonid and Salina, I say, did find an answer a very simple
one. If their student loans did not come due until they left
school, why, then they just wouldn't leave school! So after
jeeeiving their bachelor degrees, they re-enrolled and took
masters degrees. After that they took doctors degrees, loads and
loads of them, until today Leonid and Salina, both aged 78, both
Et& in school, hold doctorates in Philosophy, Humane Letters,
Jorispradence, Veterinary Medicine, Civil Engineering,, Op
tometry, and Dewey Decimals. Their student loans, as of last
-faooary 1, amounted to a combined total of eighteen million
dollars, a sum which they probably would have found great
difficulty in repaying had not the Department of the Interior
recently declared them a National Park.
1 1961 Max SbolmM
You don't need a student loan just a little loose change
to grab yourself a new kind of smoking pleasure from the
makers of Marlboro the un filtered king-size Philtp-Moms-Commander.
Welcome aboard!
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
l.City (Nev.)
5. Disembark
9. Louisiana
creek
10. Pungent
vegetable
12. Aside
13. Reigning'
beauty
14. Repeat
(mus.)
15. Farmer's
pest
17. Cry of pain
18. Mr. Wynn
19. God of war
20. Crude iron,
or tin.
21. Modern city
problem
22. Evenings
(poet)
23. Partisan of
Napoleon.
26. Brightly
colored fish
27. Bullets
28. Pinch
29. Excavates
30. Pronoun.
32. Letter
33. Listen
34. Fuss
35. Mature
37. Bird of prey
39. Dirties
40. Shod
41. Title
42. Droops
Down
3U Quick
2. Nestling
3. Conjuacticn
on
4. Stratum
surface
6. Timber -wolves
6. Afresh.
7. Nothing
& Girl's
name
9. Infant
11. Most-recent
16. Crown,
scepter,
19. Oriental
nurse
20. Roman poet 33. Ship's
21. Brittle steering:
etc.
22. Out
cast , peoples
(Jap.)
23. Blun
ders (slang)
24. View
25. Retro
grade 29. Thick
30. Waste3
time
31. Having
digits
;TpATjECcL o r
SjEN A T E t-0 G E
A P AChc , jA p E N
5t! Tfr r, 16 1 p I e JeJd
HjAtr 'IE UR ElT..-.
'JC H I. W PjA NZEE
SET N E IIS cIe NTH
aJqIp rib s sleje so
nMiii..iii5Q B. His
H A N OT 1 AtPIR A TT5
tONCEl i LIE A P NTS
ylElAlRilsiElNlslEfci
cookie
apparatus
Testerday's Answer
34. Eager
3(T. Brain
. membrane
38. Exclama
tion
ir -
wL
iiizi-
Z
3S 1 s&
tt '
m 1 1 vaA i i-y
AT WASHINGTON MEETING
ents Hear Peace Corps Objectives;
Greeting, "those who did not
make it to Ft. Lauderdale," Rep.
Henry S; . Reuss (D.-Wisc.)
opened the-National Committee
on Ybuth Service Abroad
(Peace Corps) in Washington,
D: c:, March. 27-30.
Representing UNC were two
delegates and-an alternate plus
nine other UNC students who
served as resource, personnel or
official observers.
Approximately 400 persons
attended' the conference, in
cluding 200 delegates of colleges
from all. parts of the United
States, special foreign student
representatives, National Stu
dent Association delegates.
adult observers from various
government and industry inter
est groups, and resource person
nel. .
Humanization Asked
Calling' for a humanizatoin of
U.S. foreign policy andc a re
treat: from "dollar diplomacy,"
Reuss, the original proponent of
a youth corps, said that the stu
dents of America were align
ing themselves with the-con-scieutious
students of foreign
countries.
"Once again the college stu
dent is speaking out on issues
and really meaning it again,"
stated a letter to the conference
from Senator Estes Kefauver.
"Too long the campus has. been
the Rip Van Winkle of the Na
tion." R. Sargent Shriver, President
John F. Kennedy's recently ap
pointed Director, of the Peace
Corps, emphasized the rigorous
training which will be neces
sary for peace corpsmen. The
indoctrination period would in
clude intensive study of the
"culture, customs, mores and
languages of the country to
which we are asking people to
go; it will include courses in
our own history, civilization and
culture, and of course, it will
emphasize language," Shriver
added.
The training period would
range from three weeks to six
months in its present planning
stages. Nationals and officials
of other countries would be ob
tained to participate in the
training program. In addition,
experts of this country would be
participating in the training of
those selected for the corps.
"The Peace Corpsmen will be
fighting enemies just as power
ful as any army," warned Sen.
Hubert r Humphrey. "Their
battle for peace will pit them
against the ancient conditions of
war and totalitarianism hun
ger, poverty, illiteracy, disease,
and ignorance . . . This corps
will not destroy; it will build."
Delegates and resource per
sonnel thrashed out specific
problems in small workshops
and resolutions from each group
were compiled and passed by
IDC A.wurd-Given
r
fir
in
1
A
1
Vith Spring
In the air
A comely
chick on
your arm
And the
Intimate
To loaf in
Man that's
the voting members of ther con
ference. Ed Riner and Peter Von
Christerson represented UNC as
delegates and Tom Orr, as an
alternate, also represented the
National Education Association.
- OUTGOING INTER-DORMITORY Council President '
Swag Grimsley extends his hand to Joyner Derm President2 ?
Bob Quackenbush, who collected three trophies Outsiand-"
ing Dorm President, Outstanding Dorm and Most Improved
Dorm -at the recent. IDC awards banquet. (De Leon Fields
photo) '
Really living!
r
mm
Salinger Speaks
To Newsmen
Here Saturday
Pierre Salinger, . President
John F. Kennedy's press secre
tary,, will speak at, the 12th an
nual North Carolina Editorial
Writers Conference at the Caro
lina Inn, Saturday, May 6.
Salinger will be the dinner
speaker and will talk about
Kennedy and answer questions
about the press conference and
other matters of interest to edi
torial -writers.
Because of limited seating,
Salinger's speech is closed to
students. .
t:n::::::u::::::::::n::::::::::::::::nu::::::;un:::n:n:j::j::::::::un::::
8
TO BUILD PLANT
Campbell Soup Co. announced
it will build a new food pro
cessing plant at Paris, Texas,
that will spend about $20 mil
lion a year on raw materials,
containers and such.
r
maul.
9
1
I!.
WANT TO; FLY?
LOW COST FLYING THROUGH CO-OP CLUB NOW
FORMING JOIN NOW. CHARTER MEETING
FRIDAY NIGHT, APRIL 7 AT 8 P.M.. IN THE GRAIL
ROOM, GRAHAM MEMORIAL.'
W W W W W WWW W WWW WWW
ittmsi
COPrRIOMT 1961. THE COCA-COLA COMPANY. COCA-COLA AND COKE ARE fEO'STEOEMARKS
S5iS:ii::W::$::?5:-: -
s fir jH
A start on your financial planning
may be just the tonic you need
right now; it's never too early to
begin.
Life Insurance is the only invest
ment which gives you a combi
nation of protection and savings;
it's the ideal way to start a
complete financial program.
Your campus representative will
be glad to discuss with you a
variety of plans which may be
tailored to your individual present
and future needs. See him now,
when you can profit by lower
premiums!
BILL DAVIS
Campus Agent
Ledbeller-Pickard Bldg.
- Tel. 942-2860
PROVIDENT MUTUAL
Ufa Insurance Company
- ctphL'adefphia-.
60,000,000 times a day i
people get that refreshing new feeling
with Coke!
Bottled under authority of
The Coca-Co'.a Company by.
9 t i t "
tit r: t&ti
h- - : v f " t
It -x s - -'w svj&y ?
i- ''t - - t i
$ V
- r
' '
i
;?
DURHAM COCA-COLA
BOTTLING CO.
Durham, N. C.
The New York Life
Agent
on your campus is a.
good1 man to- know
GEORGE COXHEAD, CJLAX.
UNC '42
Office over. Sloan Drug Store
Phone 942-435a
O
Special NoHcc To
:UNiVEIlSITY EMPLOYEES
Hospital Care Association's Blue Cross Group
for "University Employees will be reopened for
the addition of new members on Thursday,
April 6. If your family, is not protected by
Blue Cross, don't miss this opportunity to get
Comprehensive hospital andf surgical care at
low group rates, on a payroll deduction basis.
' FOR! FURTHER. INFORMATION
; WITHOUT' OBLIGATION SEE
OUR REPRESENTATIVE
MR. JOHN CHAPMAN
Thursdays April S
5 A.M.-k PiM.j P.M.
YMCA LOBBY
HOSPITAL CARE
ASSOCIATION
Durham, N. C.
Serving University Employees since 1933.
SUPER RIGHT" F RE St
I WHOLE
b)
r
ZJ
1
, mm m m
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Government Inspected
. ui) fn
PER
13 ( f I
Sfea, v&P
Prices in this ad are effective
through Saturday, April Olh.
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ALLGOOD BRAND
SLICED
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1-LB.
PKG.
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MARVEL BR
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Large Fcmily Size? IFreshly Defied
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