....... J . ' "Cdne'3ay- v-v- 8, IE 37 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Searches Alon? N. C. Coast KYC Geology Teacher imosouf pones mums i " ' " MM . TTh 7T7T B i 1 1 r:V rrl vg. - - . . " V 7 T r 1 " " v I ? V- f .X 1 - - ! Paris Rive . . from left, Paul Villaz, Beatrice Arnac, Bernard Waller and Jacques Marchais. French Cabaret Troupe Brings Paris To UNC Paris comes to UNCs canv pus tomorrow night when Graham Memorial presents the single performance of the internationally famous French literary cabaret troupe, "Paris Rive Gauche" at 8:C0 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Bertrice Arnac, Bernard Haller, Jacques Marchais and Paul Villaz star in the two hour" program of songs, ballads, satire, and poetry set to music. It is the troupe's fourth -U.S. tour, presented under the auspices of the Fren ch Government in cooperation with the French consulate. The' group has experienced wide acclaim in over 1C0 concerts throughout the U.S. The group's program will range from 13th century French folksongs through the latest sounds from Paris's Left Bank. Much of the song material and all of the comedy of Paris Rive Gauche is in English. All internationally known, two of the singers, Arnac and Marchais, have been awarded the "Oscar" of French song, Le Grand Prix Du Disque; Arnac in 1962 and 1963, Marchais in 1966. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Antiquated 6. Church. service 10. Throbbftl 1L EllipUcal 12. Swagger 13. Eg-shaped 14. Willingly 15. Currant 16. Exclama tion 17. Torch 19. Public notice 20. Drama 21. Consumed 22. Avaricious nesa 24. Grass cutting machine 23. Race 27. Begetter 23. Jewish month 29. Tied 31. Chinese department 33. Velvet 33. Eject 37. Upper crust S3. Hum 39. Lath 4a Reigning beauty 4L Soviet news agency 42. Clued DOTSTf 1. Courtyard . 2. Measure of land 3. Jumble, as cards 4. Place 6. Verbal ending ' 6. Film 7. Tope humming . birds 8. Glut 9. Slim 12. Cunning 13. Pro peller 15. Beam 18. Stripling 20. Coop 21. Bewilder (die vzc&m-J AFTER WER'VE &0K& , i LTM5RRE CAN SCRUB) ' i?r RArfcf ANl AFTER ' . vr. ratiC. AN AFTER i . j li Gauche Arnac, a favorite on French television, is both a singer and an actress, her records selling all over the world. .Marchais began his career as an actor, his first important role - in the comedy L'Azote. His musical career soared to success overnight with his first album. Bernard Haller is a popular figure on French television as a comif, mime, and fan tastist. Paul Villaz, fantasy singer and composer, began as and still is one of the most colorful figures in the cabarets of Left Bank of Paris. The New York Times said, "If a half-dozen New Christy Minstrels took to .singing poems by Edgar Allan Poe and Norman Mailer, the result would be a crude version of 'Paris Rive Gauche'." "After the entertainment begins it is the, miracle of talent that transforms everything. The show is about as.fine a blend of sophIstica-i tion.as you will find in town," , said the New York Herald Tribune. "They are beautiful troubadours of France and reported the Boston Herald 22. Most serioua 23. German measles 24. Part of an nr. 23. PTngn for one 27. Entreat 29. Stubs 30. Metal . 31- Pena Yecterdjrs lized, as for speeding 32. Shoshonean 34. Geological division 3S.Tunneler 38. English river 40. Berkelium: sym. jj i uCISI - SriAlQjL YlS a c c o sJt :.'4e t? Trr G N 1. lv i slelRlELislTHMTll Z pi w - -yM WE & "W TIME OF VEAR UJUEN ALL IKE &5 BASEBALL ARE MADE.J'M 601N5 10 WTO IMPROVE OUR TEAM WITH A FEOJ TRAPES . it- V 1 By STEVE PRICE of The "Cxtily Tar Heel StaS UNC geology professor Dr. Walter H. Wheeler is one of few" instructors who can reach irAo his desk drawer and find an 20-mUlion year old dinosaur bone. "It's only part of a femur from a Trachodon says Wheeler, a well-known authori ty cn prehistoric animals, "but I am extremely proud of it." Trachodon was a 35-foot long plant-eating monster that once roamed the world on its bind legs. It was about 17 feet tall and weighed around three and a half-tons. Wheeler, whose speciality is prehistoric animals, has been with the University for 16 years. A graduate of Yale and Michigan, he rates the dinosaur leg bone as one of bis prized finds. The bone is half its original length of about three feet and is partly Television Viewing Today WRAL CHANNEL 5 3:00 General Hospital 3:30 Flintstone Fun house 4:00 The Early Show: CURSE OF THE UNDEAD Eric Fleming, Michael Pate Dialing for Dollars 5:45 Dateline, Sports 6:00 Dateline, News 6:20 ABC News 6:59 Viewpoint with Jesse Helms 6:55 Atlantic Weater 7:00 Death Valley Days 7:30 Custer 8:30 Second Hundred Years 9: CO Wednesday Night Movie: WHERE LOVE HAS GONE; Susan Hayward, Bette Davis 11:00 Dateline, News, Sports, & Weather 11:30 Starlight Theatre: GENE DRUPA STORY Sal Mineo WTVD CHANNEL 11 4:30 Bev. Hillbillies 5:00 Perry Mason ,'v' :2-i6:CO Newsbeat- ; v t; - Fred Blackman -- 1 6:30 CBS Evening News WEDNESDAY Sop homore pre-registration will be Nov. 13-50. Ap pointment books will be plac ed on tables outside Room 303 South Building today, for appointments. Two of W.C. Fields' short films, "The Great Chase" and "Hurry, Hurry," , and Sechan's "The Stringbean" are to be shown at 9 and 11 RENDEZVOUS ROOM Wed., Nov. 86 78 String Band 8:30 and 10:00 Thurs., Nov. ft 6 78 String Brand 8:30 and 10:00 TALENT NIGHT Fri., Nov. 10 8:00 David Sheppard 9:C3 Just Us Girls Jug Band 10:00 The Identity Crisis Sat, Nov. 116 78 String Band 8:30 and 10:00 JUST 50c A PERSON f THAT'5 A 6REAT IDEA, m V CHARLIE BR0(JM. 7 EXCUSE me missus! QU LOOK LIKE A LADY WHO'Ci BE INTERESTED IN CENTRAL HEAHN1 777 i l P i r 11 . Cawr-j i ftPi'l A covered with the remains of ocean oysters. That means the dinosaur was washed out to sea after it died," Wheeler points out. "It definitely was out of place where I found it down on the North Carolina coast." Wheeler, who has been on fossil hunting expeditions all over the state and also ou: West, has collected many other ancient bones and shells during his stay at the University. They include parts of giant oysters once nearly two feet long; portions of a jaw bone from a 30-foot long marine lizard and fragments of fish bones from the earliest known vertebrates. Ages of the finds range from 20,000 years to 450 million years old. Wheeler laughs, though, at the ages put on the finds. "How long is 80 million years in geologic time?" he asks. It's 7:00 Daniel Boone 8:00 The Virginian 9:30 Green Acres 10:00 Dean Martin 11:00 Channel 11 Lata NewsFred Ross " 11:30 Tonight Show WUNC CHANNEL 4 8:55 News 9:00 US History 9:30 Phys Science 10:00 World History 10:30 Mathematics 11:00 Antiques 11:30 Dissenters 12:00 Aspect 12:30 Mid-Day News 12:45 Art Studio 1:00 French Chef 1:30 Museum 2:00 Science-Nature 2:30 Sign Off 3:30 Modern Teachers 4:00 Electronics 4:30 Indust Training 5:00 What's New 5:30 Aspect 6:00 News At Six 6:15 Art Studio 6:30 History 7:00 Farmer Ed 7:30 What's New 8:C0 Creative Person - 8:30 TEA - - r - . 9:00 Intera'l Mag 110:00 On Chess 10:30 ' Sign Off Campus Calendar p.m. in the Gallery Coffee Shop of the Wesley Foun dation, which is open from 8 to 12. The Wednesday af ternoon symposium at the Wesley Foundation beginning at 4 p.m. is open for lively discussions. Refreshments. There will be a meeting of the Secretariat of the Model United Nations in Roland Parker 2 in GM. at 4 p.m. to- UJHV DCNT HD0 "RAPE MXfEf? i wouldn't ve rr as a GIFT, LAD IF WE 'AD CENTRAL KEATIN I'D NEVER GO CUT JJWWHERE! T7 only an instant, a snap of the pgers, when we think haw -long the world has been here. "I just ca3 it the numbexs game'." Wheeler walked to a wan of shelves lining the small oratory adjoining his office m the Lniversity's Elisha Mitcnell HalL Ha pulled open a drawer fall of apparently com mon sea shells. ,'Tnf e are W-milHon years oid he said. "Yesterday." He pulled open another drawer and produced part of a jaw bone from a Mosasaur a 30-foot long marine lizard from we age of dinosaurs, some 0 miiiion years ago. The bone is just a fragment, but from it Wheeler, who has been interested in fossils since he was a boy, can practically reconstruct the entire lizard. "We do most of our bone hunting in - quarries or limestone deposits near Librarian Elected To Council A member of the UNC library staff has been elected to membership on the American Library Association counciL . William S. Powell, head of the North Carolina Collection, was selected for a four-year term as North Carolina's ' representative. A member of the University Library staff since 19 51, Powell was formerly on the Yale library staff and served - as historical researcher at the State Department of Archives 'and History in Raleigh for three years. A native of Johnston County and a UNC graduate, he has served on a number of North Carolina Library Association com mittees, formerly edited -the Association's quarterly journal and is now its associate .editor. - He is a member of the '.University, .Press, .,JBoard of, 14 ' Governors and of the North Carolina. Historical;- Review; editorial board. " " ,- day. Projects for the coming week will be discussed. -The Slavic C3ub will meet at 8 p.m. today in Roland Parker ' 1 and 2 in GM. Guest ' speaker will be Dr. Vladimir Trem, Duke economics pro 1 fessor, who will speak . on 5 "The October Revolution: Promise and Realization" The UNC Chess Club will meet from 7 to 11 p.m. today in GM. All interested in playing chess are invited. The Student Advisory Commit tee will meet in Roland Parker 2 at 4:30 p.m. today. ITS NEW... ITS A LfWrA I w V'' ; u j - f - r: x I j i xi n ( J "Vf . "f . i . ) 1 ''r' i S : i k, . Ul ZXT.-&J N,. , i . . Dr. Walter H. Wheeler ... shows on model dinosaur where GO-million year old femur would belong. Belgrade, Durham and San ford. We dig up the shells along the coast near Cape Fear or on the Outer Banks." The oldest part of the col lection are some fish scales L HIPPIES gyrate in nightclub in "The Trip," a journey into the world of LSD, now showing at the Varsity Theater. v AQ Seats Beserred An Evening of Song and Satire Presented by Graham Memorial ITS IMPORTED... rzzirzzin J U: L U rrrRESHlNG PLEASING LIME AND EXCITING INVITING BAY RUM " CONTAINING TRAVEL SIZES OF Uim COLOGNE UUE AFTER SHAVE BAY RUM PLEASE HIM... EXCITE HSM...GIVE HIM... i embedded in reck. 'They're around 450-million years old," the professor pointed out. "Part of the numbers game again." Once the fossils are brought xv s - -0 ..Exciting & p.m. Thursday - November 9 Memorial HaU General S1.00 ITS TERRIFIC... FOR MEN SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY kit 3.50 M LJ A . into the geology lab and analyzed, Wheeler said, they are either put into storage, cr if they are truly significant finds, they will be written up in various r ideological journal "After that we lock them up," Wheeler concluded. "Right now we have so many bones and shells I don't know where we're going to put all of them." all those monthly bills with a low-cost installment loan. FIRST UNION NATIONAL 1 BANK ! I J . ! o 1 ! I I ; r v ; ! f f t f i t c - t J t t i S - t. i r 1 1 i - You get one with every I bcttJe of Lensine, a I removaWe contact lens carrying case. Lensine, by Murine is the new, faH-purpose solution i lor complete contact lens care. It ends the need for separate I solutions for f wetting, soaking '' and cleaning yor lenses. It's the one solution for all your contact I lens problerns. i t " .... f OCT ',( , . ' ' 1 L : Jl.-.":1 j J T7iTrs J - i - - j till ' "' n.' i j j I "

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view