Television Listings: Thursday, April 14 WUNC News U. S. History Phys. Science World History Mathematics USA: Artists Fitzpatrick Aspect Mid-Day News Amer. at Work Science Sign Off What's New Aspect News Discovery Friendly Giant You the Deaf What's New USA: Artists Ericourt Performance U. S. History Sign Off 8:55 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 12:45 1:00 1:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:15 6:45 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:15 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS 8:00 P.M. U.S.A. ARTISTS NET "Jim Dine" This is the first of five programs on the coming-of-age of American art in the past generation featur ing contemporary American painters and sculptors exam ing each artist individually. Thirty-year-old Jim Dine, not classifying himself among the Pop Artists, yet working con currently with them, discusses his life and work. Produced against a background of Dine's home and what he describes as a bourgeois, middle-class life, the program portrays the artist's interest in "Happen ings" which Dine describes as having developed out at the ar tist's need to speak more di rectly with the viewer a n d one of these "Happenings" is included in the film. 9:00 p.m. PERFORMANCE UNC-CH "Italian Art Songs" John Hanks, tenor; Ruth Fried berg, pianist; and Adriana Ciompi, guest reader; all from Duke University, perform a song by Caccini, a number of songs by Respighi, and three of Boccaccio's poems set to mu sic by Respighi. The program, performed in Italian, is accom panied by English subtitles. VVRAL (Ch. 5) 5:30 Aspect 6:00 Daybreak 6:45 Ray Wilkinson-Farm News 7:00 Viewpoint with Jesse Helms 7:05 Mike Wallace News 7:55 Mike Hight Weather 8:00 Mickey Mouse Club 8:30 Life of Riley 9:00 Femme Fare -- Bette DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Wine receptacles 5. Small quarrel 9. Icon 10. Custom 12. Pure and simple 13. Flood 14. Snoop 15. Saluted 16. Sloth 17. UAR capital 18. SUnt 20. Tardy 24. Term in cuisine 25. More dainty 26. Sicilian resort 27. Gigrgle 28. Molar, for one 30. Tantalum: syir. 31. Seeks 34. Olla 35. To burden ag-ain 36. Latvian coins 37. Catkin 38. Tribunal 39. Facility 40. One of a famous pair DOWN 1. Part of A.E.F. 2. Nursery rhyme character 3. Eon 4. Compass point 5. Pellucid 6. Primitive stone tool 7. Border 8. Rifle firing" pin 9. Deadlock 11. Man's nickname 13. Trickle 15. Tennis or gof 17. Awards cf a sort 19. Flew 21. Insect YA ff I" Nb I6 1' lB F ' - w. ZZZZW- ,4 wzzzpm WLZZZZ n" ZZZW- 55 w Elliott & Jack LaLanne Arlene Dahl Time for Uncle Paul Donna Reed Supermarket Sweep Dating Game High Noon News Father Knows Best Ben Casey Confidential for Wom en A Time for Us News General Hospital The Nurses Si merman Early Show: SUBMARINE SEA HAWK: Bret Halsey William A. Creech Dateline ABC News Viewpoint with Jesse Helms Atlantic Weathpr 9:55 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 2:00 2:30 2:5 3:00 3:30 400 4:30 5:55 6:00 6:20 6:35 6:40 6:45 7:00 Ray Reeve with Sports Thurs. Night Movie: LEGEND OF THE LOST: John Wayne Bewitched Peyton Place The Baron (c) Dateline, Sports & Weather Starlight Theater- 9:00 9:30 10:00 11:00 11:30 DOWN AMONG SHEL TERLING PALMS: Mitzi Gaynor PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS BEWITCHED - 9 p.m. Samantha's cooked her goose in a cauldron when a private detective discovers she's a witch. WTVD (Ch. 11) 6:00 Aspect 6:30 Homer Briarhopper 7:00 Today Show (c) 9:00 Captain Kangaroo 10:00 Eye Guess (c) 10:30 Real McCoys 11:00 Andy of Mayberry Slje Daily (Ear The Daily Tar Heel is the official news publication of the University of North Carolina and is published by stu dents daily except Mondays, examina tion periods and vacations. Offices on the second floor of Graham Memoria. Telephone numbers: editorial, sports, news 933-1011; business, cir culation, advertising 933-1163. Address: Box 1080, Chapel Hill, N. C, 27514. Second class postage paid at the Post Office in Chapel Hill, N. C. Sub scription rates: 4.50 per semester; $8 per year. Printed by the Chapel Hill Pub lishing Co., Inc., 501 W. Franklin St., Chapel Hill, N. C. The Associated Press is entitled ex clusively to the use for republication of all local news printed in this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches. 22. Top-like toy 23. Printing-error 25. Does a tailor's job 27. Word used with ICTaTPTE .1Agi o PALS 5.1k LATE ESTE SBO V Dw R E LIE aE p"pLp T RJO TT ORGVL S TlRlE-lw pZlA RlA C R I BP eenuk DE F I NJ Ik!.A SLED AID EM E U TEDS pigeon, sharp, wide, etc. 29. Harangue 31. Constella tion Yesterday's Answer 33. Petition 34. Brazil estuary 36. Danish weight 32. Dotted with 38. Music figures note ALL GRADUATING SENIORS SHOULD MAKE RESERVATIONS at once for renlal of ACADEMIC REGALIA THE BOOK EXCHANGE 11:30 Paradise Bay (c) 12:00 Love of Life 12:25 CBS Xws 12:30 Search Tomorrow 12:45 The Guiding Light 1:00 Peggy Mann 1:30 As World Turns 2:00 Password 2:30 House Party 3:00 Another World 3:30 Edge of Night 4:00 Secret Storm 4:30 Match Game (c) - 5:00 Yogi Bear (c) 5:30 The Rifleman 6:00 Evening News 6:30 CBS News (c) 7:00 Daniel Boone (c) 8:00 Perry Mason (c) 9:00 Thursday Movie (c) 11:00 Late News 11:30 Tonight Show (c) Lee hi re Tunisia Will Examine Sex ftlliics Wrhat is an adequate and honest sex ethic for the un married, especially as it in volves the use of birth control methods? In particular, what should university health services do when birth control help is re quested by unmarried univer sity men and women? Dr. Joseph Fletcher will ad dress himself to these and oth er social questions in the final Seminar on Population Policy at the University here this week. He is the Robert Treat Paine Professor of Social Ethics at the Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge, Mass. liis topic will be "Sex and the Unmarried: Morals Re examined." The lecture will be at Car roll Hall at 8 p.m. on Thurs day, under the sponsorship of tne UiC Population Program. The public is invited. Professor Fletcher has a varied social experience as a coal miner, an auditor's as sistant, rope factory worker, resident worker in a New York settlement house, and social research director for the Na tional Council of the Episcopal Church. He was ordained in America, served as a curate in a slum parish in London, was chaplain in a Southern woman's college and then dean of the Cathedral in Cincinnati. For nine years he was dean of the Graduate School in Ap plied Religion at the Univer sity of Cincinnati. He has preached and lec tured in more than 30 univer sities in the U. S., Canada, Latin America, Australia, Ja pan and Southeast Asia. Dr. Fletcher is president of the Human Betterment Asso ciation of America and a di rector of the Euthanasia So ciety of America and the Plan ned Parenthood League of Massachusetts. A new book, "Situation Eth ics: The New Morality," will be published this month. A Wide Selection Individual Terms T. L. KEMP Jewelry 135 East Franklin M2-1331 -i i if irtf Drill til Assisting Program Exti'iulrd: Deadline Is Frit lay A new lO-mor.th prolan: in dental assisting will replace a popular three-month sum mer program at the Lr.iver sity of North Carolina Scr.ool of Dentistry. The extended program will be offered for the firt time beginning July 7. Twenty stu dents will be selected. The deadline for requeuing an application is Friday. April 15. Any woman who is a graduate of an accredited high school and has a knowl edge of typing is eligible to apply. Applicants accepted for the course will be notified no la ter than June 10. The new, more comprehen sive course conforms to the requirements of the American Dental Association's Council on Dental Education. Gradu ates here will be eligible lor certification as dental assist ants. Dental assisting students wil be housed in the new pri vate, contemporary residence for women students, Gran ville Hall. Students will live under UXC rules and regulations governing freshmen women students. J' ' Hill 9 i , ; " - '",'1''' ' ' ' s -- - ' - ", ," Illi! lift i. ' ''r 4' v mm- t " , ? ? ,,',-'-.'..1 r , A? W?r -r? ?:W mm .V V I . :X.J A - ,flcY Report A roundup of mild events nd minor operations at the University Health Center which you mav not have read about yet: TWIN'S The Simaese twins Althea and Dorothea Allen of High Point had a com bined weight of six pounds and 14 ounces when they arrived t X. C. Memorial Hospital here last April 7. When dis charged from the hospital last weekend to return home, Al thea was a healthy 17 pounds and Dorothea was a hefty 18 pounds and 11 ounces. The twins were surgically separated here last Nov. 8. NO BREAKTHROUGH the story of a potential scientific breakthrough which ended in disappointment was related by Dr. Erie E. Peacock Jr., UXC surgeon, during a television interview on "Science & Xa ture.'' A young woman with a hand damaged beyond repair refused an arm transplant from an identical twin sister who was dying. The story was told to emphasize that even w hen m d i c a 1 problems in transplations are solved, some non-medical problems may re main. Who's to say who is to have whose arm? OBSOLETE? The use of new methods of treating brok en bones ("Internal fixation") may not be nearly as dramat ic as some of the medical lit II - , r i y ,yff i , $ - ' ' I Mm , I ,-"- n ' U n i H $ n t H ' J V U t 4 K a n t i t t i; f, i i $ u - 0 ' n u . t r ?' I s i' , i' n : ? f. i k a n n ?. ) i n h i j I n ? i v ;i y t . : .; . ; r j r i r- n j; ! i ? ? ? W color-framed stripes on clipper cool batiste oxford. . . exclusively GANT Bold Stroke 6 ant creates a handsome new expresson in stripes by framing their edges with a second color. This luxuriant cotton oxford button-down comes in color-framed stri pings of dark blue on sea-blue ground; loden stripings on bamboo ground; or rust stripings on maize ground. Hugger body. About $7. 50 at discerning stores. 5 Sold at: JULIAN'S COLLEGE SHOP . Given On erature would lead you to be lieve. Dr. R. Beverly Rar.ey. UXC orthopedic surgeon, says that plaster casts are in no danger of becoming obsolete in the foreseeable future even though 'inside methods" f holding fractures in good po sition continue to improve with more inert metals and better surgical techniques. ABORTIONS The ethical problems facing physicians were dramatically illustrated by Dr. X. J. Eastman of Bal timore in the first Merrimon Lecture here. Suppose you're the doctor and you know that women attacked by German measles during the first eight weeks of pregnancy have about one chance in four of giving birth to gravely deformed ba bies (often blind). Is is right or wrong to order therapeutic abortions, knowing that, on the average, three of the four de stroyed embryos would be en tirely normal, each a potential human being with a life ex pectancy of some 70 vears? FEMALE MOTOKBIKISTS Do coeds have motorbike ac cidents? Occasionally. In a four-month study of motorbike acidents on the UXC campus by the School of Public Health, three of 58 injured students were coeds two of them were pasengers and the other was riding a borrowed vehicle. WTith more than 600 two-wheel Jy..- . ' I 1 F? "T k-: EEL x , ' ' ' - x " -,mk- I ......... . . & v .w.-(.;o'- -y . Siamese ed motor vehicles on the cam pus now. probably less than a dozen are registered to female operators. DEAF CHILDREN Par ents of hard-of-hearirg pre school children who met at Memorial Hospital to form a Statewide organization were told how to help their young sters learn to speak. But they were cautioned "not to expect overnight miracles. It takes love, affection, patience and time." PROLIFERATION Although nhtoing has been done scientifically yet to prove that automatic toothbrushes are superior to hand-operated toothbrushes, manufacturers now have 90 different electric toothbrushes on the market. Dr. Don L. Allen of the UXC dental school told pharmacists that a good good job of caring for the teeth and gums can be done with either manual or electric brushes, if used prop erly. He added a word of ad vice: "Don't scrub your teeth. Brush vour gums." POPULATION PROBLEM Who is responsible for the ex cess births creating a severe population problem in the U.S.? Dr. Lincoln H. Day, Yale so ciologist, told the UXC Semi nar on Population Policy that almost every segment of the population is contributing to the excess, some more than 41 fZ TOWN & CAMPUS f i" " 1 - -it ' ' I y Twins others, of course. The o n 1 y groups that seem not to be contributing to the excess are the foreign-born, the Jews and the college-educated Xegroes. Urban whites, for instance p o d u c e a proportionately smaller share of the total ex cess births, yet more than a third of all excess births orig inate with them. DAXGER The public hasn't been properly educated to the damage which can be done with home reliner and denture repair kits, says Dr. David P. Dobson. head of the dental school's Department of Prosthodontics. Do - it - your self dentistry with drugstore products can cause facial mus cles to be pushed beyond their physiological limits. The re sults: fatigue, soreness and pain. CONCERT MONDAY Allied Arts will present the Durham Civic Choral Society singing Vivaldis "Chamber Mass" and N'orman Dello Joio's "To St. Cecilia" on Monday. The Society will be accom panied by the Triangle Sym phony Orchestra under the direction of Robert Barstow. The public is invited to at tend this free concert at 8:15 p.m. in Baldwin Auditorium on the East Campus of Duke Uni versity. :H ' V J- ;?