Wednesday, April 26, 1967 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page 3 captives Ever since Copernicus set us straight about the motions of the planets around the sun, instead of around the earth as had previously been thought, man has wondered about the possibility of other Solar Sys tems. Just within the last year astronomers have located what seems to be a system of planets forming about a dim star known as "R Monocer os. For the first time in his tory of astronomy, we may be able to observe the birth of another planetary system. This new information plus a vari ety of other facts and figures are woven into the program now being presented at the famous Morehead Plane tarium. The program is called "Cap tives of the Sun." Opening narrator for the presentation, John W. Stupak said, "One of the most exciting areas now being explored in astronomy is our own Solar System. It is these planets and other bod ies circling the sun which will be targets for future maimed and unmanned space explo ration. Also during the 'Cap tives' program we talk about what is known and what has been recently discovered about our space neighbors." DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Uprising 2. Jewish month 9. Feather 10. Insurgent 12. Bid 13. Ghost like 14. Moroccan native . 15. Of the sea 16. Hesitation sound 17. Salt: -chem. 18. Man's nickname 19. Unruffled 22. Spreads grass to dry 24. Originator 26. Mop 28. Fleshy fruit 31. Exclama tion 32. Mis chievous person 33. Exclama tion 34. Black; Seaport 37. Ruth's husband 39. Feast 40. Chief 41. Banal 42. Desert garden spots .43. Lath 44. Grows old DOWN 1. Amend 2. Data, short form 3. Extra ordinary person 4. Road topping material 5. Of a region 6. Stag or elk 7. Hillside dugout 8. Curbed 9. Fleshy fruits 11. City in Yorkshire 15. Brahman sage Yl I'VE BROUGHT NER A LITTLE PRETEND PET GRADUAl ING irdl THINK VOU'RE TOO TEN66 OWEN OkQrt (J,TH A PEN, Of Sun" orehead The presentation begins with te prugram narrator pointing out and describing just when and where to look for the plan ets outside at night. Planetary inuuuns - are discussed and demonstrated using the com- j?!5!? cial effects, each of the plan . ' UiC UOC VI LJC- ets is men Drought into view for a close-up look and dis cussion. The program con cludes with the visual presen tation of the birth of our so lar system and the discussion of the possible "R Monoceros" system. "Captives of the Sun" is presented each evening at 8:30, Saturdays at 11 a.m., 1, 3, 4 and 8:30 p.m. and Sun days at 2, 3, 4 and 8:30 p.m. Reservations are not neces sary at these times for small family groups. School groups may make reservations to see "Captives" at any of the above times or at 4 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. Different graded school programs are offered each hour on Wednesday, Thursdays and Fridays from 10 a.m. to 2 pjn. Write to the Morehead Planetarium, Chap el Hill, for a complete pro gram schedule. 17. Sainte: abbr. 20. Peru vian plant 21. Sphere 22. "Stowe" 23. Epoch 25. Apex 26. Brief 27. Fisher men's boots 29. English river 30. Perco lates 32. Cay G O T H AME NjAjCpl lAIRIOll IDE IDIOINIAIRI mil Ufi ElNIEf ntaislie IS Yesterday's Answer 35. Wicked 36. Bristle 37. Boast 38. French river 40. Blue grass V 4-2& Ai h U 14 VAs 16 h la VA ZZll!lZHZZ 19 20 21 22 23 1!ZZZ!1ZZI! 26 27 28 29 30 ZZlllZZlllZ m 1 1 w 1 1 y MAY 7th IS HI eea- OQBEBIUO PMffi-VOBQ 0BB5E18 D0CJATTD D88K HI before sou Bean , &u should SORT OF 503IRL VOUR PEN AROUND A BfT TO L005EM UP THOUGHT A BOTTLE Y THAT'S VERV SWEET- FLO,PXl AAAV ;AVE ME 0s RUM MIGHT 'ELP OF THAT COLD O YOURS - t onr it t Sk FIND THE ON THE 1 V AONEY T' BILL Sorority Academic uzings Wh W J Me leased The Office of the Dean of Women has released the fol lowing Sorority pledge class averages and over-all sorority averages for the fall semester, 1966: SORORITY PLEDGE CLASS AVERAGES AND RANKINGS Kappa Kappa Gamma 2.7150 Kappa Delta 2.6901 Kappa Alpha Theta 2.4965 Alpha Delta Pi x 2.4929 Pi Beta Phi 2.4816 Chi Omega 2.4441 Delta Delta Delta 2.3600 Phi Mu 2.2527 OVER-ALL SORORITY AVERAGES AND RANKINGS Over-all sorority av.': 2.5845 Kappa Kappa Gamma 2.8064 Phi Beta Phi 2.6875 Kappa Delta 2.6106 Kappa Alpha Theta 2.5885 Chi Omega 2.5749 Alpha Delta Pi 2.5227 Delta Delta Delta 2.4588 Phi Mu 2.4221 WTi It Academic News Briefs M eetings, Research, Here This Week Humanities Lectures The Cooperative Program in .the Humanities at the Uni versity of North Carolina here and Duke University will spon sor two public lectures by a University of Wisconsin scho lar next week. Dr. Stephen G. Nichols Jr. of the Institute for Research in the Humanities at Wis consin, will speak on "The Aesthetic of the Provencial Canso" at 8 p.m. Thursday (April 27) in UNC's Dey Hall. At 8 pm. Friday (April 28)' in the GreenJ Room, East Duke Building, ! East Campus, Duke, Nichols will lecture on "Creation and Re-Creation in the Chanson de Geste." The Winchester, Mass. na tive was graduated from Dart mouth and received his Ph.d. at Yale University. He has taught at UCLA and in Wis consin University's Compar ative Literature Department. that's TH U3AV... move YOUR WHOLE ARM AR0UN0... FASTER f 'ROUND AMD AROUND.. IT NER, WD - BUT E3 OMLIfl. 'OW AM I GOINvTl PAN FOR hixWk,r-,t DTH Look straight up in New East quite a view He is the author of FOR MULAIC DICTION AND THE MATIC COMPOSITION IN THE "CHANSON de RO LAND" (1961) and he has edit-1, ed Rene Wellek's CONCEPTS OF CRITICISM (1963). With others he has edited THE SONGS OF BERNART de VENT ADORN (1962). He is American Secretary of the Societe Rencesvals. Research Reports Three medical scientists from the University -of North Carolina School of Medicine will present research reports within the next week at three national meetings in Atlantic City, N. J. Dr. Joseph Renn, now on duty with the Navy in Pensa cola, Fla., will explain re search conducted at UNC to the American Society of Clin ical Investigation on Sunday (April 30). Dr. E. K. M. Smith, a Fel low in the Department of Med icine here for a year and a half will outline a research project on Sunday to the American Federation of Clini cal Research. Dr. Louis G. Welt, chair man of the Department of Medicine here, will speak on Tuesday (May 2) on "Mem brane Defect: the Sick Cell" to the Association of American Physicians. His research is seeking to explain things that happen to the lining of a cell in sick people. Readers' Theater The Speech Division of the University of North Carolina will present "Search Man's Quest to Know Himself" at 4 p.m. Wednesday (April 26) in Room No. 105 Caldwell Hall. This Readers Theatre Perfor mance is. the fourth in a ser ies of monthly readings being sponsored by the Speech Di-. vision. Six students will read ex cerpts from well known works (poetry, novels and essays) of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Ayn Rand,Walt Whitman, Archi bald MacLeish, John Stein- THOSE UK SCO) FAULTS BUT NOBODV CAN . Aw Tl I -T"- T-! il i I SAV THAT" I'M INQUISITIVE Staff Photo by JOCK LAVTEREB beck, Carl Sandburg, Edna St. Vincent Millet, John Donne and others. Readers include Vicki Coats : of 1909 Penna Ave., Kannapo lis; Michael Freeman of 505 Ohio St., Spindale; Veronica Hensley of Rt. 5, Box 331, Marion; J. Earl Lasater of' 411 W. Salisbury, Pittsboro; Katherine Talbert of 803 Cok er Dr., Chapel Hill; and Brant Wansley of 628 Park Lane, De catur, Ga. Language Study Five members of the Uni versity of North Carolina's Romance Languages Depart- ment here will participate in the University of Kentucky's 20th Foreign Language Con ference Thursday through Sat urday (April 27-29) in Lexing ton, Ky. Prof. John E. Keller is serv ing as section organizer for Spanish and will preside at a luncheon meeting of the American Association of Tea chers of Spanish and Portu guese Saturday. Prof. Joseph R. Jones will serve as chairman of the Span ish I Section. Prof. Daniel R. Reedy will present a paper en titled "Vanguard Journals of Peru" and Prof. George B. Daniel will present a paper on "Violence in L'Astree." Prof. Nicholson B. Adams, currently a visiting professor at the University of Arizona, will speak on "Zorriila's View of History" and will deliver greetings to conference parti cipants at the AATSP lunch eon. In addition, Prof. Elizabeth R. Daniel, a graduate of the UNC Romance Languages - Department and now a profes sor of Spanish ... T rth Caro lina College . Du,-:am, will deliver a pai on armien to's Role in the Develop ment of the U. S. Department of Education." Come with us...asour Campus rep This is a year 'round job. Fly with us as a stewardess during the summer, be on our payroll as a campus representative during the school year. In June you will go to our beautiful Stewardess School for 5'2 weeks. Then fly the friendly skies of United until fall. Pay rate: up to $450 a month. These are the requirements: sophomore or junior age 20 through 26 in good health . between 5'2" and 5'9" above average grades ability to speak before groups If you are interested, contact the Placement Office for an in terview on WEDNESDAY. May 3. United Air Lines an equal opportunity employer ; C1 Former Cannibal Studying To Return As Missionary By CHARLES RICHARDS United Press International LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI An Indian who eight years ago was a member of a fierce band of cannibals in the jungles of Peru says he plans to return some day as a missionary. He has one fear that he will not be recognized as a tribesman and will be cap tured and eaten raw in the same fashion as he himself used to delight in while kill ing tribal enemies. "I cry everytime I think about my parents being like that and of . having been one of them myself," Yunem Diaz Calderon said. "But it is a cus tom for them to kill and eat their enemies. They do not know they are doing wrong." Yunem was kidnaped from his tribe at the age of 10 by a group of white hunters. From then to now is a long story. He was held a chained prisoner in the hold of a ship, escaped and then learned about civilization and Chris tianity in Central America. Making it to Texas he was trained as a missionary, de spite six months imprison ment in the Texas Rio Grande Valley for illegal entry into the United States. Now he speaks Spanish flu ently and divides the day be tween cleanup work at a Lub bock Latin American Church Anthropology Meet Sixty - five papers on the development of man and his anthropoid relatives will be presented during the 36th an nual meeting of the American Association of Physcial Anthro pologists here April 26-29. Two symposia, "Bone Growth as Revealed by in Vivo Markers" and "Primate Studies in Anthropology," also will feature contributions by association members. The symposium on t bone growth will open the four-day ..meet. It is divided into1 ses-i sions on chemical markets, implants and natural markers. Among the speeches sched uled for the session on chemi cal markers are: "Lead Acetate as a Vital Marker for the Analysis of Bone Growth" by Bernard J. Schneider of the University of Illinois; "Isotope Uptake for the Study of the Formation of . Bone and Dentin" by Richard C. Grulich of the National In stitute of Dental Research; and "Mutipie Markers for the Experimental Study of Bone Growth" by John F. Cleall of the University " of Manitoba. Two speeches will be given on implants. II iriHI .TW, I """ II 111 lll-ll' -TIIIIH- , Mill I II,.- ffs&l NA How to look good on any ( ) golf course: play it bold I 1 " J I with Arrow's Pin-Hi, the w 100 2-ply cotton lisle knit l jif that stays fresh and crisp . ft rPM to the eighteenth and beyond. vCy v Cfi Stays tucked-in too. vM U An extra-long back tail keeps y n down while you swing. ! .s M A great many standout colors, -l "ssssri- $6.00. Pick out a few. '- t ' , I V- x i , 1 III I WM"11'. - . ii and earning on his studies both religiously and academi callyto become a missionary. . He thinks he is 18 but does not know for sure because "in that place (in the moun tains, north of Lima), we did not measure years or time. We did not eat at any parti cular time. Only when hungry-He lives in a small room in the Iglesia Methodista La Tri nidad, a, Latin American Me thodist Church where he was brought by Dr. Roberto Pe draza, minister of the church and head of the denomination's Latin American work in Lub bock. Church members are fond of Yunem, and it is in their homes he gets much of the educational training. He plans to broaden his academic learn ing, especially in English, by enrolling in an adult education class at a Lubbock school. DELK-LEGGETT-UOnTOn CHAPEL HILL 107 THRU SAT. APRIL 26 THRU APRIL 20 OTHERS! DOIl'T HISS IT -'V...V ! - " I 9 r m PORTRAITS BY '1. NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED & SELECTION OF SEVERAL POSES FULL POSE PORTRAIT BABIES AND CHILDREN OF ALL AGES PORTRAIT DELIVERED AT STORE A FEW DAYS AFTER TAKEN Got A Hugo 11 x 14 or Ox Portrait 10 OF YOUR CHILD Hours: 9:30 A.M. Till 5:30 P.M. Fri. Nite Til 8:30 .. - 1" Yunem is only 4 lect 6 and has to stand on a chair to an swer the church phone. But he said most of the members of his Peruvian tribe are tall. One reason why his attempt to mingle with the tribe again will be difficult is that the tribe, believed to be called the Huaris Indians, has no language as such only grunts and other crude noises. They wear animal skin wrapped around their feet as shoes and have no clothes other than a short lion cloth. They live in caves. "Strangers are killed," he said. "Anyone who does not be long to the tribe is an enemy." He has a vivid recollection of the wild land where the tribe lives. "Jungle, tiger, snake," he says in describing it in English. The tribe never eats cooked food but lives off raw meat, roots and fruits. HAMILTON a HAMILTON

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