. Saturday. March 4, 19t7,c, - THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page 4 Dormitory Mouth If Congress gets its way. The resolution reads: JOINT bi" boost next month. Last month, a Mr. Dole in troduced a ioint resolution to nroclaim AdhI as "National Residence Hall Month." The resolution reads: Joint RESOLUTION. To authorize the President to proclaim th month of April, 1967. as Na tional Residence Hall Month. "Rpsolved by the Senate and the House of Representa tives of the United States of America in Congress assem bled, that the president is Malnutrition Hurts Mind CAMBRIDGE, Mass (AP) A nutrition specialist said to day about 300 million pre -school children in underdevel oped areas of the world are suffering from malnutrition. And, he said, there is indir ect evidence that the malnutri tion is impairing mental abil ity in all of them. "Malnutrition," he said, "may actually be a cause of underdevelopment" in nations, rather than a result, because impaired mental ability in a population would influence na tional growth. Dr. Moises Behar, Director of the Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama at Guatemala City, Guatemala, said the 300 million represent about 60 per cent of the world's preschool children. He made his report to an in ternational conference on malnutrition, learning, and behavior at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and in an interview. The conference, believed to be the first of its kind, is explor ing the growing belief among scientists that malnutrition da mages the human brain. Dr. Behar said the figure of 300 million will tend to grow because the population in un derdeveloped areas is grow ing at a faster rate than in developed areas. "The social, economic and political well being of human ity in the near future may well depend," he said, "on finding out if malnutrition does, in fact, affect man's abi lity to learn and, if so, on eli minating the cause." i Dr. Behar said the theory will be tested in six commun ities in Guatemala, perhaps beginning by the end of this year. , I Food supplements will be given to children in two of the communities. They will be compared to children in the other communities to see if they perform better on tests of mental ability. Dr. Behar said the study is aimed at separating the ef fects of malnutrition from so cial and cultural factors. The communities, which he did not name, will be simi lar and contain about 800 per sons each. The children will be studied from birth to school age. He said the study will cost about $300,000 a year. It is being finance by the Nation al Institutes of Health of the United States. Dr. Behar, a pediatrician, said the long - range impor tance of determining the exact relationship of malnutrition and mental ability iustifies withholding food supplements from the control communities. He also said his group could not afford to supplement the diet of the entire population of Guatemala. Dr. Behar said he conclud ed that 300 million children are suffering from protein-calorie malnutrition on the basis that retardation in b o d y weight of children in an area indicates the extent of mal nutrition. Studies of body weight in children have been made in many of the undeveloped areas of the world. 4 IFeminine Oh what a quieting, soothing effect a delicious box of cho colates has on the feminine world. Try a box and see. hereby authorized and re auested to issue a proclama tion designating the month of April, 1967 as 'National Resi dence Hall Month.' calling upon the people of the United States to observe such month with appropriate ceremonies and activities." Just what the aforemen tioned ceremonies and activi ties are no one has ventured to say, but some will certain ly be forthcoming, the DTH was assured by high sources. If it hadn't been for Don Steeples of Kansas State Uni versity. April would have probably not received this honor. As president of the Na tional Association of College and University Residence Halls (NACURH), Steeples sent a request to Congress to make April NRHM. Law Center To Be Big Peace Effort WASHINGTON (UPI) The most effective anti-missile missile may be a law book. That's the idea behind the World Peace Through Law Cen ter, which is marshalling a vast array of legal talent for its third world conference in Geneva, Switzerland, this Sum mer. Lawyers of every nation have been invited to the Geneva sessions. Those of the Soviet Union and other Eastern Europ ean communist countries don't wax enthusiastic over the pro grams but they have participated to some extent. Red China has responded through items in its newspapers denouncing Washington attorney Charles S. Rhyne, president of the Center, for inviting Chinese lawyers. Outer Mongolia and Albania are the only two nations from which no response whatever has come. While the conference is in session July 9-14, a related group, the World Association of Judges, will also be meeting. Chief Justice Earl Warren is its chairman. World statesmen have been talking for years about sub stituting the "rule of law" for the "rule of force." But those whose business is the law attorneys and judges have only recently tried to assess what their profession could do towards world peace. Now the Center, a Rhyne brainchild, is trying make up for lost time. More than 100 committees are at work drawing up literally hundreds of treaties and laws for international application Human rights, space programs, communications, education, foreign investment, patents, crime and urban re newal all are part of the master plan. The world's experts will report on progress at the Geneva meeting. I Another goal is establishment ' of a world court system, beginning with regional courts:? Details are beingrworked outj -for a special court devoted ; exclusively to problems arising between the United States and Mexico; and for another hav ing U.S.- Canadian jurisdiction. These courts would be open to individuals who want to sue foreigners or foreign governments as well as to the gov-. ernments themselves. Appeals from regional courts, might go all the way to the Court of International Justice at the Hague. Hardest Task After the lawyers have completed these blueprints, their hardest task will still lie ahead of them: selling the idea to their home governments. Many activities of the Center, a wholly private organiza tion, do not require government approval. Plans are under way to provide a unique service to attor neys around the world who need to know the law of one or more countries on a specific subject. The project grew out of a discovery made by the Center soon after the formal establishment in 1963; a major bar to use of law is its unavailability. Rhyne said in a recent statement that less than 20 of the 125 or so nations on earth have "a fairly up-to-date printed law code or a recent compilation of their laws." "Less than 20 nations have up-to-date ' printed volumes of their high court decisions," he said. . . .Lawyers constant ly report from Africa, Asia and Latin America that they must rely on printed or mimeographed collections of indi vidual statutes, and newspaper reports of court decisions." - - - ' In Lagos, Nigeria, a leading lawyer has 10 books, ancient editions of law books from England. A barrister in Dakar, Sengal, has about a dozen old books from France, three texts in English which he can barely read contributed by an American and "no code or constitution of Senegal." The Center plans to put the "law of the world" into a com puter in Geneva and make it available to lawyers anywhere instantly. Rhyne says the technical feasibility of this goal has been established. Existence of communications satellites cuts the cost. Any nation will be able to have its law code updated and V fflranqmilizeE f rr.. .--ir """i ' Asked "In order that National Res idence Hall Month become more meaningful," he wrote, "our organization is asking Congress to authorize and di rect the President to declare the month of April, 1967 as 'National Residence Hall Month.'" The Steeples letter and a copy of the JOINT RESOLU TION wound up in the Dean of Men's office yesterday, but there was little comment on the subject. "It is an interesting devel opment," said Assistant Dean Fred Schroeder, "but I wouldn't go beyond that." To date, there has been no decree from the President making April, or any other month National Residence Hall Month, but one may be soon forthcoming. 1WI5 STUPID l'IATCCATlWCi TREE HAS AW KITE! , C rW IF A BLOKE CANY SV HOSPtiTu. SLIP OUT FC2 OWE I C1DJ entrance n LITTLE D2JNX- f H))))l Business Manager John V. Parker has announced that the Carolina Playmakers production of Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters." originally scheduled to run through Mon day. March 6, will be held over through Tuesday, March 7 due to a tremendous demand for tickets. 'i'h'i Chekhov play, which opened Wednesday night ( March 1 ) to an enthusiastic audience is directed by Mark Schoenberg and features an all-student cast. "Three Sisters" marks the third Playmakers produc tion in a row which has been sold out before the open ing of the run despite a one-day extension. The pro ductions of "Antigone" and "You Can't Take It With You" were sold out previously. Good seats are available for the extended Tuesday performance, and "standing room" can be purchased at the door for the remainder of the run. Evening per formances are 8:00 with a 2:30 Sunday matinee. Tick et information can be obtained at 214 Abernethy Hall and at Ledbetter-Pickard in downtown Chapel Hill. printed out by the computer. Then government officials, multi nation corporations (International Business Machines oper ates in 104 countries), judges and lawyers can receive com puter printouts of the law of any nation on any subject within seconds of requesting it. The language would be English, with translations extra if necessary (not by computer). Laws could be put into the computer in a country's own language but would of course come out the same way. Model Laws Another Center committee is studying model laws for na tions, based on experience in the United States with model state statutes and model city ordinances. Center committees are also keeping tabs on International or ganizations like the European Common Market and U.N. ag encies, which generate law that crosses national boundaries. The aim is to urge changes or spur the agency to greater ef fort. The 1,000 high court judges expected at the World Associa tion meeting will be acting wholly in a private capacity, not as representatives of their governments. "Judges speak many different languages, live under many different systems of government, and have many different customs, traditions and educaional background," Chief Jus tice Warren said recently, "but they possess a common meet ing ground in the principles of law which are common to mankind. . . "We hope to have the high court judges of every nation participate in the drafting of a statement of the general principles all judfes have in common. Upon that foundation we hope to erect a structure that can in a distinctive way serve the cause of world peace. "What new procedures, principles, means, methods law or legal institutions can we collectively propose? . . . lit will be a thrilling experience to listen to great judges from throughout the world express their ideas. . . WoMm The "imperishable violin vir- . ist, he has emerged as a lead tuoso," Mischa Elman, known ,, ing international personality the world over for his unique able to command front-page "golden tone," will appear in news as easily as movie-stars the University of North Caro- " or political figures. lina's Hill Music Hall during 7 Now in his seventies, Elman the third of a series of four celebrated the 50th Anniver- artist seminars, March 9-11. The New York World Tele gram once said of Elman, "Music stays young so long as he man playing it stays young. With Mischa Elman, it is a kind of lifelong romance." . Elman will open his three day stay on the University campus with a concert at 8 p.m. Thurs., March 9, in Hill Hall. Among the arrangements he will play are "Sonata in A-Major" by Handel, "Sona- to No. 3 in D Minor, Op 108" : by Brahms, "Concerto No. 8 in A-Minor" by Spohr, "Ser enade. Melancolique" by Tsch aikowsky and other famous favorites. Joseph Seiger will acompa ny them on the piano. A 8 p.m. Friday (March 10) Elman will give a lecture in Hill Hall and at 2 p.m. Satur day (March 11), he will con duct a master class there. Debut in New York Elman's career began in De cember 1908 when he made his American debut in New York as a 17-year-old who had be hind him five years of playing in Europe. He had already been stamped a prodigy to be remembered for all time. Since then this musical idol's name has become a house hold word. Having played more concerts in the U. S. than any living instrumental- IF YOU DC(j LET GO Or THAT IOT5, itL WCtC HDU i ... ist Gomes Mere- sary of his American debut in ' December 1958 with a recital in Carnegie Hall. Full of zest, vitality and capacity for en joying life, he has no intention of retiring. His concert sched ule for the coming season would tax the energies of most younger men. Guest Solist His career has been filled with numerous honors. Just be for his 70th birthday, he was selected by the late President John F. Kennedy as the guest soloist to appear with the Na tional Symphony Orchestra at the Inauguration Ceremonies in Washington. Shortly after, the White House Press Corps in- vited him to play at its din- ner in honor of the newly elect- ed Mr. Kennedy. In the spring of 1964 he play- ed at the reception and din ner honoring the Prime Min ister of Israel at the invita tion of President Lyndon B. Johnson. Russian-born Elman first played a violin at age three. At six he was studying in Odessa, and at ten, was the first of the great Leopole Auer wonder-children" making his tory at the St. Petersburg Con servatory. He astonished the musical world with his debut recital in Berlin at age twelve, and at fourteen, he had captured He Cavnias For By JIM FIELDS Special to DTH "I've never felt so foolish in my whole life. I never thought I'd go that far just to get tic kets to a basketball game." These were the comments Mike DeBruhl had to make yesterday when ask what he felt like after spending all I nvia The North American A i r Defense Command is respon sible for the aerospace de fense of the United States and Canada. The tiger shark is named because of its hooled teeth rather than its tiger - like stripes, says the Miami Sea quarium. Watutsi, the legendary giants among African tribes men, average only 5 feet, 9 inches, says the National Geo graphic. Infrared emissions from Jupiter indicate the planet ra-' diates four times as much en ergy as it gets from the sun. When a whale surfaces, it blows a vapor trail 15 or 20 feet into the air. Elephants vanished from North America about 10,000 years ago. Shoeless Joe Jackson batted .403 in 1911 when Ty Cobb won the American League batting title with a .420 mark. Pedigreed animals exported by England for breeding in clude 20 varieites of cattle, sheep, pigs and farm horses. Aetas, primitive tribesmen in the Phillipines, prefer smoking cigarettes with the lighted ends in their mouths. Kern County, Calif., is the world's largest producer of black-eyed beans. X'Z the hearts of the British roy alty and London society. Following his 1908 New York debut, he played 21 more concerts the same year in the same city, a record that, has remained solitary and unique. Worldwide Concerts Elman has appeared nearly every place worldwide with a concert hall with the possible exception of Liberal. He has had three rare vio- lins the first a gift from his wife when they were honey- mooning in Paris; a 191 year old Amati, which he received from a Russian nobleman while he was still studying at the Conservatory in St. Peters burg as a boy of 12, and a 1772 Stradivarius which he ac quired when he was 17, during his American debut. He also has a cello-bow col- lection which is the envy of all cellists and a great violin bow collection which, with his violins, are valued together at $100,000. Asked what is the secret to his unique tone he says, "Tech nique is important, but without heart a performance cannot touch and uplift the audience." Elman record sales have ex ceeded the two-million mark and he has played more than 3000 recitals, drawing from a repertoire of over 600 works. His appearance here is spon sored by the University's Mu sic Department and is open to the public without charge. The fourth visiting artist se minar and recital will be held April 24-25, featuring Blanche Thebon, mezzo-soprano. Iplj "TREES HAVE HARP Wf JL last Sunday night on the steps of Carmichael Auditorium so he could be one of the first in line to get tickets for the Duke Caroina basketball game to day. "I thought about leaving at least a hundred times." he added, "but I just couldn't do it. The Carolina-Duke games are always so good that I had to make sure I got the best tickets I could." Mike said that it never be came too cold during the night. "I guess the temperature might have dropped into the mid-twenties," he continued. "It was a calm night without anv wind, and it wasn't too bad." About this time his room mate, Mike Ford, ask him why he was doing jumping jacks at three o'clock in the morn ing if it wasn't too cold? "I did them to keep from going to sleep," he answered. "I didn't get to cold, but I sure did get sleepy." The two Mike's weren't by themselves Sunday night. There were about 130 others that stuck it out the whole night. Several of the boys brought the mattresses from their beds to sleep on, and everyone had a large supply of blankets. Some others brought sandwiches and coffee with them in case they got hungry. They Sell For Free "Doughnuts 10 cents for a ' free South" the sign in Y Court read. Behind a card table piled high with papers, money and pastry boxes a slender, good-looMng-in-an-in-tense-sort-of-way girl distrib-' uted the doughnuts?-1 : One might think civil rights had gotten lost in the shuf fle of war in Vietnam, black power and .the. backlash elec tions of 1966;' but it hasn't. The battle 1 for equality goes on still; especialy i in r.Dixie, . and one of the groups fight ing the battle is Concern for a Free South, the group which was i selling doughnuts in ' Y Courtt and near the library yesterday. . A green "jhfdiTnatldri ' 'sheet ' v as well -as clothing and other f rnrianietf aithe- .isifikers.Hjcohtributiqns x:- collected at" accomp" 'Concern,' it said, f 'has be- come actively, involved in aid ing civil rights workers with material supplies desperately needed, in? order, toi continue. "These people, . .mostly . na tives with little outside sup port, -are encountering incredi ble harassment. ntr.-2y , "Klan-type activites are supported by local law author- lties. Appeals to the Justice Department- are in vain due to a 'hands-off policy avow- difficulties, of enforcing laws edly invoked for fear of legal now on the books." A middle-aged woman came up to the table. "How much are your doughnuts?" she "A "dime," the girl replied. "No, no, I don't mean for one. I mean for a whole box," the woman said brusquely. "Ninety cents," the girl said after; a short, stunned pause. "Well then give me a box," the woman continued in her no-nonsense way. She put down a dollar and walked away without getting her change. Many people paid a quar- DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Frag mented resin 6. Great quantities: slang 11. Greek goddess of peace 12. Custom 13. Top of a wave 14. Rigoletto, for one 15. Stop 16. Attractive 2. Odd: Scot. 3. Close, as a hawk's eyes 4. Parts of the feet 5. Seine 6. Pitman or Gregg, for instance 7. Sleeveless wraps 8. Incite 9. Earth, 10. Remain 16. Abyss 18. Unequal ed 17. Sends forth 19. Opposite of 19. On the 42 across as a hostile 22. High , priest 25. Stop!: naut. 26. Former . silver coin of Turkey 28. Soak flax 29. Conspire (often foL by "with.") 3L Shadow 32. Effect 35." and - the Man- 39. Abscond 40. A toast 41. Capri, Man, Pines, etc 42. The goal of the ILN. 43. Ap proaches 44. Affixed DOWN 1. Wealthy Tickets "As the night went on, more and more people began to arrive," DeBruhl contin ued. "By the time they open ed the doors at 6 o'clock, there must have been at least 500 people there." "It looked like they were giv-v ing away money the way peo-' ' pie rushed through the doors, and the first guy in our line ; got hurt," Ford added. He was caught against the door., when the crowd started push- " ing and couldn't get free ot it. 1 -i His head got hit pretty hard against the metal part of the door, and I think he broke his nose." Both boys agreed that the waiting was a lot easier once they got inside. Ford even sat down on the floor and went to sleep. When ask if he would go through it again for the tick- ets, Ford replied: "It took me " nine and a half hours to get-1" them, and I swore afterwards, r that I would never do it again, , But come next year, I'll prob-4 t" ably do it all over again just to get good tickets for this ij game." . With a funny looking smile" on his face Debruhl agreed !,: that he too would probably do the same thing again nextt 'j year, because as he put it, "This isn't just another ball11 game. This is Duke vs. Caro-'O lina." ...,. Doughnuts South ter for one doughnut and some contributed outright. One man v, walked to the table, paused, r briefly, put a five-dollar bill' down and walked quickly away. ;; Not everyone, of course, ap proved of Concern. Two 'law-school types walk ed by. "Doughnuts for peace," one of them said and both snickered. Those selling the pastries could view such occasional1 K barbs, .with equanimity. Al-o though they often had trouble keeping their . signs standing in a gusty, capricious wind they sold 50 dozen doughnuts'' during the day. ( Money earned by the sale Wesley Foundation will be , . taken to Missisippi this week- . end by members of the group.' You-Are! Come as You're always welcome at Z. the friendly old Intimate !oi Florsheims or sandals, -.zi you'll find the service. -j- quick and sure. ' rl Come calling and bring a Friend! The Intimate Bookshop open every night 'til 10 20. Prayer 21. Rodent Si i AIL 22. Slender finial 23. Mone. tary unit: Bulg. 24. Anger 27. Moved . fur tively 30. Cereal grain 31. Over or ahove: c p I A I HA I A L 5 FEN tirIfI Yesterday' Auwet 34. Alone, on . stage . 36. Way 37. Spice 38. Vehicle . with prefix 32. Curb runners 40. Resort 33. Otherwise "i 2" 3 4 s" 777 T - Is T'ite 32. tA 34 WiS 3b 17 18 -zz.zw.zr ----Jm. I) -A A &r Sox Pounlifulj CANDIES 6 IfZ WLJa