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PLACEMENT SERVICE Opening Interview Company representatives students according to the fol of Monday, Jan. 6, through F contact them through the scho S..,.. heasrd. Spoke,. ON CAMPUS Campus squirrel scaling two story wall of Administration Building and intently spying on austere dean looking over letters in his office. " " " Coed paradoxically doing daily exercises while taking a bite from her chocolate candy. " " " Over-anxious students, upon seeing first lone snowflakes, set ting a time for a snowball fight; their dreams never being real ized because of complete lack of ammunition. " " " Student absent-mindedly walk ing out cafeteria door into lobby with her used tray after eating breakfast. Suddenly being awakened to her error, scampering back to conveyor belt to avoid being seen. - " " " Student, w h i l e Christmas shopping, dropping package in the middle off"Main Street dur ing change of light; the same standing safely on the corner watching package tensely as car tires missed running over it. A happy retrieve followed. " " " Coed uttering excited cry as she watched her dictionary which she had left on the tray in cafe teria slowly move into the kitchen on the conveyor beit. Later finding a thoughtful dishwasher had spared her Webster from the fate of a dirty dish. RENTALS - SALES FOIU YOU HAVEN'T TASTED STEAK +UNTIL YOU - TRY OUR OWN FAMOUS 1 CKORY STE CNos. mSPi January s Given vill be available to interested owing schedule for the week riday, Jan. 10. Students may ls which set up the interviews. Monday, Jan. 6 Pratt and Whitney Aircraft will conduct interviews of electrical engineers, chemical engineers, mechanical engineers, and applied math and physics majors in the School of Engineering. Tuesday, Jan. 7 Tennessee Eastman Company will be in the School of Engineer ing to interview chemical, mechan ical and electrical engineers as well as chemistry majors. The Factory Mutual Engineer ing Division will talk to majors in physics, math, chemistry and en gineering in the School of Engi neering. Wednesday, Jan. 8 F e d e r a l Telecommunications Laboratories will have representa tives in the School of Engineering to interview electrical engineers. United Fuel Gas Company will conduct interviews from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the School of Engineer ing and from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. in the School of Business Adminis tration. Thursday, Jan. 9 Fairchild Guided Missiles Divi sion will talk to engineers in all fields in the School of Engineer ing. Friday, Jan. 10 Representatives of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company will be present in the School of Engi neering to interview electrical, chemical and mechanical engi neers. Wright Air Development Center will also be in the School of Engi neering to talk to physics and en gineering majors. 4AL WEAR FOR >EN id.m . * Mr.. "SI SMOK ED .BROILED ALKS ~Th } JOY TO THE WORLD! ... Althou munity in various ways, its universal of France, from left, Ray Yih of Chir Freshman Dormitory to talk about ii AROUND THE WORLI A Glimps Shows Uii Although Christmas is cele- T brated in different ways fi throughout the world, the theme tr remains the same. sc For example, in direct con- st trast to the Christmas celebra- t} tion in this country is that of fc Spain which is charming in its is simplicity. F Thinking back six years to pl the last Christmas in his native of Spain, Odilo Blanco said, "In my country Christmas is more for the family." He went on b< to explain that the religious t} meaning of the holiday is not t} marred by commercialism or s} profit making. Christmas trees tc are rarely seen and home decor- pl ations do not usually go beyond ti, a small Nativity scene. ff Also, Spanish children receive ti their presents from the Magi E instead of Santa, Blanco added. The gifts are given on Jan. 6, D the day the wise men were sup- 2( posed to have presented their tc gifts at Bethlehem. D French Yuletide g Describing the French Yule tide was Fulbright scholar Janine Tachard e, France seems to have found is the happy medium between the pl austerity of Spain and the ex- ai travagance of America, Janine ti TO: Student Body Ftaculty Adminisi & St We WI3/ JOu a Slater Food CANDY ICE CJ AT A LOCA SH A s. < gh Christmas I. celebrated by ti message is the same to Christ ma and Betty Hwa of Formosa g a celebration in their lands. (S eAt Ch, ity In D achard observed. All French milies decorate Christmas ees but place the Nativity ene at the foot. Instead of ockings the children place reir shoes around the hearth r Pere Noel to fill. Pere Noel always accompanied by Pere ouchard (Father Whip) who aces a small whip in the shoes "bad little boys." English Yuletide Jim Hart and Tony King, )th of England, commented on ie Coming of the Yuletide in ie mother country. Since we iare a common source of cus ims with England, the obvious iases of the holiday are prac cally identical. The chief dif rence lies in the ancient tradi ons and superstitions in which ngland is rich. An example of this is Boxing ay which is observed on the ;th of Dec. The origin of the rm is indefinite but on Boxing ay each family gives a small ft to its public servants. Flaming Pudding A plum pudding, which reryone stirs once for luck, another British tradition. The adding is covered with brandy >d brought flaming to the able. ration off y/ou3 Chriama3 Service REAM FT DRINEI SAND 4ANY CONVENIE TIONS ON CAMI LNK S DISTRIBUjTING 4 .. ie members of the Carolina Com lane everywhere. Janine Tachard ather around a Christmas tree in taff photo by Ken Sturgeon) 'istmas iversity Tony King described the Pantomime, which is as much a part of the season as caroling. The pantomime, a type of mus ical comedy based on a well known fairy tale, is presented - for the children in the afternoon and becomes "a bit more Chau cerian for the adults at night." Regardless of the outward signs of celebration of the holi day around the world, Christ mas with Christ at its center has the same deep significance everywhere. ODK FACULTY ADV History Pr 0r Receives I Dr. Robert D. Ochs has been promoted from associate professor to full professor in the Depart. ment of History at the University, according to Dr. R. L. Wienefeld, deary of the college of Arts and Science and head* of the Depart ment. Doctor Ochs, who joined the University faculty in 1946 as ad junct professor, is a native of Bloomington, Ill. He earned the A.B. in history from Illinois Wes leyan University in 1936, the M.A. degree in 19l37 and the Ph.D. in 1939 from the University of Illi nois. After completing work towards his doctorate, Professor Ochs was research director of the Anti Defamation League in Chcago from 1939 to 1941. Entering the army in 1941 he rose from private to major and was put on inactive reserve duty as a lieutenant colonel in civil affairs-militar-y government in 1946. At the University Doctor Ochs has also served as associate editor of the USC Press from 1950 to 1962. A past president of the South WICHES NT PUS :o.. INC. IN LITERATURE SEI Prof Is Ai Of PubliC Dr. J. Woodrow Hassell, Jr., p: the University, is author of a newly ; of North Carolina's Studies in Coml Doctor Hassell's work, "Sources Recreations et Joyeaux Devis of Bo in the series of studies. The publication was developed I sertation on the French "conte" lil contains a discussion of the life of question Df the authorship of the tal of the bibliography pertaining to hi Doctor Hassell was graduated fr earned from the University of Noi 1937 and the Ph.D. in 1941. He h, Japanese Language School at the Colorado. Doctor Hassell joined the Univ recently p'romoted from the rank of a in the department of foreign langual He has also taught at Virginia I versity of North Carolina. During U. S. Navy and at present holds th, USNR. 'NORTH FAIRBANKS NI Reindeer M Swing Sant By BOB GROSSE t Music Analyst b Once upon a time - and a very good time it was - there lived a reindeer named Sammy. Now Sammy wasn't just an ordinary a reindeer, he was a very, very dn usual reindeer because he was a reindeer musician and he played lead trombone in the "North Fair banks Nine." Sammy was the idol of every little reindeer and cari bou in Alaska; they all wanted to be hipsters like him someday and swing and lead a reindeer dance band. The teenage reindeers liked Sammy too; they loved to dance whenever he played. Sammy - to be brief - was a very, very cool reindeer. Now it happened one cold win ISOR ofessor romotion Carolina Historical Association, t Doctor Ochs is a member of the South Caroliniana Society, the Illinois State Historical Society, the Mississippi Valley Historical Society, the Southern Historical Society, the American Historical t Doctor Ocha Association of Professors. He is listed in the Dictionary of Ameri can Scholars for 1957 and is also I a member of the Reserve Officerst Association and Omicron Delta Kappa, honorary leadership fra ternity of which he is a faculty advisor at the University. Doctor Ochs has completed "A Bibliography of the Westward Expansion of the United States Since 1763" and, for a U. S. Army-I Navy field manual, "Arts, Monu ments and Archives in Military Government Operations." He was editor of "The South Carolina Historical Association Proceed ings" from 1947 to 1965. Doctor Ochs is also a member and past president of the Columbia Quill Club, the University Film Society and the University Fac ulty Club. MASTER CLE Main Plane 1907.08 BLOS Branch Off ice. 1447 SUMTEIR 3351 FOE 4501 "SERVICE: and c j5V5Ug.a JUJaJU rno azWW uIES ithor a.tion rofessor of foreign languages at published volume in the University >arative Literature. and Analogues of the Nouvelles naventure des Periera," is No. 20 rom Prof. Hassell's doctoral dis .erature of the 16th Century. It Bonaventure des Periers, of the e collection attributed to him, and s life and works. om Davidson College in 1936 and -th Carolina' the M.A. degree in is also attended the U. S. Navy Universities of California and ersity faculty in 1946. He was sociate professor to full professor ,es. 'olytechnic Institute and the Uni World War II, he served in the rank of Lieutenant commander, N ' [usi cians i's Load er night that Sammy and the oys were playing at a house reezing for an Eskimo family. It was a fine party and all the rein eer folk were there. Sammy and he group felt especially groovy nd were wailing away when Ros oe, the drummer, remarked, "Say, ammy, do you know what tonight "No, man, what is tonight?" ammy said. "Why, tonight's Christmas Eve." "Well, too much!" Sammy ex laimed, "I guess that means ole anta and my relatives from the Jorth will be along soon. Crazy !" Toy Trouble Meanwhile, the very fellows they vere expecting were having diifi ulties. The load of 'toys that year vas very heavy and the night was old. Santa and the eight reindeer ere very tired. "If I have to fly up to another ousetop, I'll scream," complained )asher. "My hoofs are all shot from rancing and pawing on the oofs," said Dancer. "To the top of the porches, to he tops of the wall, Man, that's il we've done all night long!" aid Comet. "I'm fagged," said Donder. Take A Rest "Santa," Blitzen, the largest and trongest of the deer and the eader of Reindeer Local 147, sorth Pole Branch, said, "Let's ake a rest. The boys are really ooped." "All right, Blitzen," replied anta, "I'm tired too. Pull on down o the ground and we'll stop. It ooks as if we won't be able to inish tonight. I hate to disap >oint all of those children with isions of sugar-plums dancing hrough their heads, but . . . "0. K., Fellows, take five," said ~litzen. As the deer pulled wearily to a halt, they heard music in the dis ance. The music grew louder and the eindeer perked their ears up. bomewhere a jazz band was play ng "'The Lullaby of Birdland." surious, Santa and the deer fol ciwed the sound of the music and oon to their delight came upon ammy and the North Fairbanks 'line blowing up a storm while all he reindeer folk danced and sang. "Look who it is," cried Blitzen. It's Sammy!I" "Hey, gang," Sammy s a Id , Dig who just came in!" Reindeer jig Everybody began to shout and Loller and the eight reindeer Lanced a jig as Sammy and Santa laus shook hands. "It's good to see you again, ammy." "It sure is groovy to see you, too, 'ops. How's everything in the tocking stuffing business to ight?" "Sammy, we've been having rouble," Santa said, "the deer are (Continued on page 4) ANERS, Inc. SOM STREET STREET LEST DRIVE DEVINE STREET ATISFACTION"