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Tuesday, June 11, 1974
The Tar Hael
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The UNC Outing Club w:n kihI hi th Union at 740 pjn.
V, ednewiay to t plan tor this umrrwr's activity. Canoeing
bacKpacklng and rock climbing at currently being planned.
Anyone Interested In these sports as well as beach camping
is Invited to attend the meeting. Check at the Union Desk tor
B.e room number.
William A. Terrill
Dr. William A. Terrill, 57, professor of
accounting and business administration,
d ied Wednesday, June 5, at his home. H is
death was due to heart failure.
Terrill was a member of the UNC
faculty for 23 yea rs and was a leader in the
accounting profession of North Carolina
and the region.
Terrill was the author of Cost
Accounting or Management and was
contributing editor of Accountants'
Handbook.
In lieu of flowers the family requests
that contributions be made to the North
Carolina Heart Association.
You work in a restaurant in Chapel Hill.
You have just finished paying for a new
trailer it wasn't easy with your salary. One
day you start getting threatening phone calls
from a bank in Baltimore. The bank says you
haven't paid for the trailer. You know you
have.
A letter to the bank accomplishes nothing.
You don't have the money to hire a lawyer.
What can you do to prevent the bank from
evicting you from your home?
Call the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Legal Aid
Project. If you are a resident of Orange
County and cannot afford to hire a lawyer
for a civil case, the Legal Aid Project can
help you get legal assistance.
According to Kay Goldstein, the Legal
Aid Project is sponsored by the Inter
Church Council of Chapel Hill.
Legal Aid clients must meet established
criteria and be approved by the screening
committee, Goldstein said. Many times.
"a-l rial u I.1.
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The Sequel
To "FRIENDS"
Contact Lenses
Lenses Fitted Duplicated
John C. Southern, Optician
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Mon.-Fri. 9-5:30
OPEN Sat. 9-1:00
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Chapel Hill
NOW SHOWING
SHOWS
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5:00-7:00
9:00
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The Summer Tar Heel is published by
the University of North Carolina
Student Publications Board twice a
week, Tuesdays and Fridays, during
the UNC Summer School sessions.
Offices are at the Student Union
building, Univ. of North Carolina,
Chapel HISI, N.C. 27514. Telephone
numbers: News, Sports 833-1011,
933-1012; Business, Circulation,
Advertising 933-1163.
The Summer Tar Heel wlil not consider
adjustments or payments for any
typographical errors or erroneous
insertion unless notice Is given to the
Business Manager within (1) one day
after the advertisement appears, or
within one day of the receiving of tear
sheets or subscription of the paper.
The Summer Tar Heel will not be
responsible for more than one
incorrect insertion of an advertisement
scheduled to run several times. Notice
for such correction must be given
before the next insertion.
ft!
g
ibeal and
1:40
3:30
5:20
7-9
j
The Course-Teacher Evaluation Commission needs
several volunteers to assist In preparing the evaluation lor
publication. Any Interested students should call Ken Herman
at 929-9304 after 6 pjn.
The Feminist Newsletter" is In Its second year o! bi-weekly
publication. Women wanting a sample cbpy should write to
P.O. Box 954, Chapel Hill, N.C.
The Student Health and Welfare Committee will meet at
730 Wednesday night at the Union In Suite C.The meeting Is
open to any students interested in the Student Health
Service. Come with Ideas and recommendations on what you
would like to see In the proposed facility.
Lost and Found
t
Lost: A Cross pen with initials W.E.P. Lost between
Murphey and Greenlaw. Please return for sentimental
reasons. Small reward. Contact Wendy, 106 Kenan.
Lost: A black wallet, identification Hank Fordham. Please
turn in at the Union Desk.
Athas wins art fellowship
Daphne Athas, novelist and UNC creative
writing instructor, has received a $5,000
fellowship from the National Foundation
for the Arts. She is one of 1 54 creative artists
in 33 states to win an award.
Athas, presently in Greece working on a
new novel, spent the year teaching at the
available
however, when applicants are not eligible for
referral to a lawyer, the screening committee
can advise them as to where they can be
helped, or can help them itself.
"Many of the people we see are connected
with the University in some capacity,"
William Avera, a Legal Aid staff member,
said. "For example we interview persons
employed by the Physical Plant or the
hospital, or by fraternities or sororities."
Marital problems are the basis of many
Legal Aid cases. According to Avera,
married couples separated for many years
often can't afford to get a divorce.
The screening committee consists of two
law students and four members of the
community, Goldstein said. A member of
the Orange County Bar Association is an ex
qficio member of the screening committee
and is also available as a resource person.
Eii7i::i:
This Week's Feature
Inexpensive
Books for
Children
Take some along for rainy
days at beach or mountain.
The Old Book Corner
137 A East Rosemary Street
Opposite Town Parking Lots
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514
ACTION
Peace CorpsVISTA
Use your skills where they are
needed most! We have 700 programs
in 60 countries and 50 states. There
are openings in many fields including:
AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
SKILL TRADES LIBERAL ARTS
BUSINESS MEDICAL
SOCIAL WORK PROFESSIONS
CITY PLANNING
Stop by and talk with former
volunteers June 10-13, at the
Carolina Union or the Y-Court, from 9
a.m. -4:30 p.m.
PUo!
. .is-
SHOWS AT 3:00-5:05-7:10-9:15
"VWhere were you in '62?
NOW PL HC6'm
3:30-6:00-8:30
7 ACADEMY
AWARDS
PAUL NEWMAN
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Free Flicks
All Union films will be shown In the Great Hall at 8:30 p.m.
The Grasshopper": Jacqueline Bisset stars as a beautiful
girl whose misadventures in life and love bring her to ultimate
despair. Plays today.
"Mr. Deeds Goes to Town": Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur
star in this 1936 comedy about a small-town greeting-card-verse
writer who Inherits $20 million and gets nothing but
trouble. Plays Thursday.
"Black Girl." a film starring Brock Peters, Leslie Uggams,
and Claudia McNeil will be shown tonight at 8 p.m. In 101
Greenlaw.
Chapel Hill Public Library Wednesday Night Film Series:
"The Sense of Wonder": Based on the works of the late author
Rachel Carson, this film Is a visual expression of her view of
nature, Its beauty, and the Importance of all living things.
University of Tehran in
Fulbright grant. She- will
University this fall.
Iran under a
return to the
Her most recent novel, Entering Ephesus,
was selected by Time magazine as one of the
10 best novels of 1971.
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'Everything in sound"
by Emily Hightower
Statf Writer
The Summer Student Governing Board
(SSGB), functioning during the summer in
place of the Campus Governing Council,
approved a $15,000 loan for the summer Tar
Heel at their June 6 meeting. The loan will
enable the summer Tar Heel to continue
publication until money allocated in the
1974-75 budget becomes available this fall.
The bill, establishing the summer Tar Heel
loan, was a compromise of an unsuccessful
bill introduced by John Sawyer which would
have permitted the summer Tar Heel and
The Daily Tar Heel "to be considered
identical for constitutional and financial
purposes."
Sawyer's bill would have provided that
any Tar Heel surplus funds be
reappropriated to the DTH. According to
the bill, the funds could have been used "for
purposes of collateral."
Sawyer said he thought passage of his bill
would indicate "a formal gesture of good
faith to the D7"." The bill would also have
established a summer Publications Board
consisting of the chairman of the regular
Publications Board and any other members
SPECIAL
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Good any Mon.-Thurs.
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of the Publications Board living within a 20
mile radius of Chapel Hill.
Other SSGB members pointed out that
under current Student Government law, the
chairman of the summer Publications Board
is the treasurer of the student body. This
position is currently held by Tim Dugan,
also chairman of the SSGB.
When Sawyer's bill failed on a 3-3 vote,
other members proposed the summer Tar
Heel loan bill.
When Sawyer's bill failed, he threatened
to walk out of the meeting. At this point.
Student Body President Williams insisted
that Sawyer sit down, saying, "This is your
bill, so don't walk out!" The $15,000 loan
was then proposed as an alternative
measure.
The SSGB also passed a bill providing for
the appointment of a student to the
committee currently studying the revision
This Week's Special.
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and expansion of the Carolina Student
Union. Williams said he would hold open
interviews for this position. According to the
bill, the committeeperson Williams selects
must be approved by the CGC.
Williams said the duties of the committee
person would include seeking input from
students and student groups about what
current facilities should be continued in the
new union and what new ones should be
included.
SSGB also voted to join the National
Student Lobby, a professional group which
lobbies in Washington, D.C. on issues it feels
are of concern to students. Williams said the
NSL had been highly recommended by
William Geer, director of financial aid.
SSGB also allocated $750 to the Fine Arts
Festival for use this summer in raising funds
and contacting potential performers.
$13500
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