Tuesday, March 2, 1971 Ths Dslly Tar Heel At Duke symposium Op by Jessica lianchar Staff Writer Two of the highest ranking officials from the United Arab Republic and Israel will speak on the Duke campus this week during a Middle East symposium. The honorable , Yitzhak Rabin, ambs or extraordinary and pleni-potenilary from Israel to the United UNCNews Bureau Insane, bizarre, good, experimental and sick are some of the adjectives used by the editor to describe stories in the winter edition of the "Carolina Quarterly," which will go on sale at UNC this week. "In reflecting on this issue's short stories and poems, since they are largely from people under 30, one imagines they reflect what's happening in the minds of at least a certain segment of the writing population under 30," said editor George Wolfe, 28. Wolfe talked about the four short stories and several poems. Luke Walton of Plainfield, NX, writes about a boy and his blind sister. "While attempting to help her, he kills her," said Wolfe. 'The boy tells his story from an insane asylum." A brother and sister have the same initials in another story. The girl, an artist, senses that their identities are mingling and interchanging. "There's a vague hint of sexuality," said Wolfe, "but this isn't the central point of the story, This is a very subtle, sophisticated piece by Ursule Molinaro, a French-English writer." North Carolinian Ken Keffer, 20, has written another story about a brother-sister relationship in which the sister dies. "It's a fine semi-experimental piece of short fiction, very low-keyed and not at all heavy in the usual sense of the word," said Wolfe. This is the former UNC student's first published short story. "Pursuit, Pursuit" is the story of a woman in New York who imagines men are following and chasing her. Wolfe describes this story as "a fine Luncheon -Special 11:30AJV1.-2:30 PJV1. BBQ CHICKEN w2 Vegs.& Rolls $.97 RENTA-CAR : t Only ; $4.09 A Dsy, $.04 Mils Quarterly '..-- 0 I (BUT You Must Bring Thb Ad)' ' ; j CROWELL LITTLE MOTOR CO. j 'NOMINATED BEST 44 supEnb -Canby. N.r. Time K tllm by LUIS DUNUEl o &$tntMted n.yr 44 CISC ) (o ) uL ri NOW SHOWING 3-5-7-9 t::1' " ' " A A Tin i rn x r 7oMcv K;- ,rrVf .AND. NOW SHOWING 3-5-7-9 n States, will speak today at 7:15 p.m. in Page Auditorium. Ambassador Rabin is the former Chief of Staff of the Israeli army in charge of the operations during the Six-Day War in 1967. A national news magazine called him "the highest ranking Israeli in the West. The Ambassador, a personal advisor of Moshe Dayan, is involved in nwrhnlntnrn'l studv in paranoia." Author Irene Schram of New York, not yet 30, has had more than 50 short stories published in magazines throughout the -country. William Oinningham of Kernersville takes a "thoughtful, scholarly look at William Harmon's book of verse, "Treasury Holiday," said Wolfe. Termanent Errors" by Reynolds Price is reviewed by poetess Del Marie Rogers of the N.C. University English faculty. Miss Rogers poetry has appeared in "Kayak," "Choice," "Epoch" and "Southern Poetry Review." James Clark, assistant professor of English at N.C. State, reviews Sylvia Wilkinson's novel "Cale." Clark adds cultural familiarity to his review since the novel is set near his hometown in eastern North Carolina. Of this issue's poets, two are native North Carolinians and two, David Rigsbee and Robert Hefner, are seniors at UNC. Abortion ideas sale Students, faculty urged to support new bill by Jessica Hanchar Staff Writer The N.C. Senate will debate and vote on a proposed liberalized abortion bill next week. Proponents of the bill encourage students, faculty and townspeople to write or send telegrams to their state senators this week. , "What is needed now is some gentle , political pressure in which UNC students can participate," said a leader for passage - of the bill."She advised writers "to "keep the simple and apolitical, low keyed, with no pressure." The present state abortion law states that an abortion can be done for one three reasons: 1) if the woman's physical or mental health is endangered, 2) if the pregnancy is the result of rape or incest RsntAT-Bird 3.00 A Day; $.03 Amh FOREIGN FILM" f.lACglC . Y r n71 CATISE01NS DEH-UVE FOAWCO UEUU by Karon Films Untied USTETXSU - - fials it OH" II EC the special United Nations mediations this week. in new i We can expect him to say something extremely interesting on the nature of the negotiations," said Jeff Kurzweil, co-chairman of the symposium. Kurzweil pointed out that the Mideast cease fire is over March 7. The Egyptian negotiator in the peace s wee Thomas N. Walters, also a faculty member at N.C. State, has contributed a one-page lyric "movie" poem on an old ' George Raft film. Betty Adcock, a local poetess whose work has appeared in the "Red Clay Reader," "The Nation" and Tennessee Poetry Review," has one very nice poem in this Quarterly, Wolfe said. "And there are some strangely interesting sexual poems by Rush Rankin, a former Duke student" now teaching at Hobart College." "There is nothing lighthearted or optimistic in these stories," Wolfe said. 'They are deadly serious, perhaps too serious. The authors are making efforts to talk about very profound and confusing psychological situations. "I know some of these stories are paranoid, and, in some ways, sick, but that's what we get in the mail;" said Wolfe with a shrug of his shoulders. and 3) if there is a possibility of fetal deformation. The present law also states three doctors must concur that the procedure should should be done and a woman under 21 years of age and not married must hav a parent sign their approval. The new bill states that abortion is a matter between a woman and her doctor and, if maried, her husband. If a woman is oyer 1 years of age and not married, :no .co-signature is necessary. . .. The major restriction in the new feiil is that abortion "on demand" may be performe4 only up to the 12th week of I u MILTON'S FROGSTRANGLER ENDS SATURDAY ALL THOSE SUPER BUYS WILL v -------- :-w.:.x:.:.:.:.:5:x I I LOST: Small black and brown female cat ("Sadie") from Malette St. area. 942-4277 . Interested In buying a new or old model FM stereo tuner for around $50. Call after 3 ;00-929-3832. - FOR SALE: Beautiful registered Irish Setter pups. Available March 14 $60 to $75. 929-1036 after 4 p.m. FREE NASSAU VACATION! Register for free spring vacation cruise to Nassau and Freeport aboard the TS Flavia. Mar. 2 9 -Apr. 2. All meals, room and transportation included from Miami. Drawing held Mar. 19. AND: FREE COOLER OF ICE with purchase of a case of your favorite beverage. $5.75, $4.99. b&b SERVICE IN CARRBORO, ACROSS FROM KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN. SUMMER IN EUROPE! Student flights: " May 29-July 28: $ 199 June ll-Aug.28: $205 June29-Aug. 18 : $230 NYLONDONNY 942-7289 evenings HUNT SEAT RIDING LESSONS. Special group rates for adult beginners. Located near Eastgate Shopping Center. Sheffield Riding School. Durham 4 89-5494. ? FOR SALE: 1970 Triumph, Daytona 500, twin carburetors, A-l condition. Asking $1050 helmet, rack, and mirrors included. Call Stan at "29-1094. Oniy senuus himuiiici piease. FOR SALE: 1968 Pontiac GTO. Black with black vinyl top. Black interior. 400 cu. in engine. 4 -speed transmission. 8 -track stereo tape player. Corvette side pipes. Less than 35.000 miles. Good condition, very sharp sporty car. $1900.00. Call George Perry a 828-6690. JET TO EUROPE $189.00 NY-Lon.-NY June 9-Aug. 25 UNC Flights, 201 Carolina Union There will be an important meeting of all interested horseback riders Wednesday. Mar. 3 217 studion Union at 7:30 p.m. Further information call Harold Glascock 967-2377. For SALE: Martin Tenor Sax, completely reconditioned by Selmer in London. Berg Larsen mouthpiece, case. etc. A professional instrument. $450 or best offer. Call Adrian. 933-3363. I M o 1 1 talks, Dr. Mohammed Hassan FJ-Zayyat, will speak at the symposium Thursday at S:I5 pjn. in Pzge Auditorium. El-Zayyat, the permanent representative and ambassador to the UN from Egypt, is called "the highest ranking Egyptian diplomat in the West." Dr. Martin Lakin from the Department of Psychology at Duke will speak on "The Psychological Factors m the Arab-Jewish Conflict: Case Study Approach" at 4 pjn. in 136 Social Science building on Wednesday. Lakin conducted sensitivity group sessions between Arabs and Jews in Israel- He will report on his findings. Dr. Trevor LeGassick of the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Literatures from the University of Michigan will speak on "Islamic Culture as Revealed Through its Contemporary Literature" March 4 at 4 pjn. in 130 Zener Auditorium. A professor in the UNC Department of History, Dr. Herbert Bodman, will speak on 'The Search for Peace in the Middle East" at 4 p.m. in 130 Social Sciences Building on Friday. "We are trying to give this area of the country insights into the scope and depth and meaning of the crisis in the Middle East," explained Kurzweil. All meetings of the symposium are free and open to the public. "We especially encourage Chapel Hill students and the community to attend," Kurzweil said. pregnancy. If over 12 weeks pregnant, a ; woman may get an abortion only for one ; of three reasons stated in the present law. V The abortion, under the present bill, ' must still be performed by A licensed physician but no longer performed in a licensed hospital must be It can be done in a hospital-affiliated clinic. A 30-day residency requirement is required in the new bill although the 3- month requirement in - the present law jsvas declared unconstitutional. C IZ All letters and '"telegrams should Te addressed to the State Legislature Building, Raleigh, N.C. BE HISTORY AFTER MAR. 6TH -.-.".-."."X." v. Private club in the Blue Ridge Mountains seeks a young married couple to act as day camp counselors from June 15 through Labor Day. Must love children of all ages. Also experience needed in lifeguarding, camping and crafts. Please send resumes to: Warren J. Tremblay, General Manager, Roaring Gap Club, Inc., Roaring Gap, N.C. KING CORONET. Bb. Silver. Used three months. Retail $225.00. Will sell for $175.00 or make offer. 649 Ehringhaus. 933-3155. FOR SALE 1971 Honda 175 good condition. Bound for Europe. Call Bruce any afternoon 942-6851. NEED ROOMMATE BY MARCH 5. Female; 2 -bedroom apartment 34 mi. from campus on Pittsboro Road; $67.50month including utilities. Call 929-6121 after 5:30. WANTED: 2 tickets to UNC-NC State basketball game wed. (March 3, 71). Student or regular. Will pay. Call 967-1354. Ask for C.J. Kirk. WILDFLOWER KITCHEN, a natural foods restaurant. 452 W. Franklin Street. Opening soon. Call 967-6236. FOR SALE: 1966 Porsche 912. rebuilt engine new extractor exhaust. BRG. Mht trade-9 6 7-2784. STEREO EQUIPMENT: Sansui Au-555 "watt RMS amp., PE-2035 turntable. 3" I manual, with Stanton 500EE 2 custom-designed. 3-way 1u,d..sp"-25-20.000 frequency response, 12t.,wor System two months old. cost over $ 4 1 0 1 a-y r guarantee on everything. Must sell. $375 or best offer. 489 -8191. ATTENTION: REWARD offered for the return or for information leading to the red toolbox taken out of the blue Pont.ac penind Lewis dorm. NO QUESTIONS ASKED. 933-6022. ' . BE A BUTTON! Send us any photo. '"Ration or sTogan exactly as you want it toP J we'll turn it into a permanent lapel oution. TJlon lues 1-34" and 3" fmeter.rc . m pencil portion to be included. Leav e iz margin for crimping. 1-34" "Uonrl. buttons $130. Add $.25 POte. roPLAN. Box 2556 -BT. Chapel Hill. N.C.27514 Placement Senice announces schedule The University Pbcernsr.t Senice announced Monday tiat the foUoing organizations wiH recruit on campus daring the week of March 8-1 2: Monday: Food and Drug Administration; Camps Tomaharuwk and Wicosuta, Inc., intervieuing for summer positions; WS Peeples and Company, Inc.; Under, Rulnick and Murray, LTD; Union Carbide Corporation; Johnson and Johnson; Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. Tuesday: Cameron-Brown Co.; F.W. Woolworth Co.; W.R. Grace and Company, Converted Plastics Group; Arthur Andersen and Company; Bell Systems, Inc. Wednesday: Arthur Andersen and Company; Metropolitan life Insurance Co.; Wachovia Corporation; Bell Systems, Inc. Thursday: Wachovia Corporation; Ernst and Ernst, interviewing for summer positions. Friday: Travelers Insurance; Roses Stores, Inc.; Riegel Paper Co.; Prudential Insurance; Chemical Bank; Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. School systems set student interviews School systems have scheduled interviews this week for prospective employes. Interested students should come by the Teacher Placement Bureau in Room 103 Peabody Hall to sign up for an appointment. Interviewing this week are: Durham City Schools, Durham, today from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; West Chester County Schools, Katonah, N.Y., today from 2-5 p.m.; Frederick County Schools, Frederick, Md., Wednesday from 9-1 1 :30 ajn.; Virginia Beach City Schools, Virginia Beach, Va., Wednesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Granville County Schools, Oxford, Thursday from 1-5 p.m.; Bureau of Indian Affairs, Alburquerque, N.M., Thursday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Newark School District, Newark, Del., Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon; Winston-SalemForsyth County Schools, Winston-Salem, Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Vance County Schools, Henderson, Friday, from 10 a.ra. to 4:30 p.m. Student soloists play in Hill Hall concert A concerto program will be offered at the Tuesday Evening Concert Series at the University tonight at 8 p.m. in. Hill Hall. The" program will feature five student soloists, the University Chamber Orchestra, and the University Symphony Orchestra under the direction of David I REG. 4.98 NOW '' O) (OY6) E aPEC I ED S' THE RECO aWVI i Mr TAYLOR'S SISTER: HER mvS) (QBamf 2. HIS FIRST SOLO ALBUM 10'AJ.I.-10 P.M. Mon.-Sat. F l wwrnnnii hiiwiiwiiii n..jai... ..in- . ...,,1, . . 1 M ... 4 ' 51 MH t. Serrins. The concert is free and open to the public. Th-e University Chamber Orchestra wZI present the first movement of the Concerto in C Major for Oboe and Orchestra by Ibydn, "Valentine's Aria" from Faust by Gunod, and "Phydila" by Duparc. The University Symphony Orchestra will perform "Concertino per trornha e strurnenti ad arco" by Rikagrr; the second movement of the "Symphony for Trombone and Orchestra" by Bloch; and the entire Piano Concerto in D . Minor, Op. 1 5 by Brahms. Student soloists are oboist Charlotte Smith of Wayeross, Ga.; Robert Daniel, baritone, of Wilmington; Steve Squires, trumpet, of Greensboro; trombonist Dan Burdett of Hampton, Va.; and pianist Erick Van Fritzwolter of Arlington, Va. Nobel Prize dinner speaks here today The 1970 Nobel prize winner for medical research will present an open seminar today at 4 pjn. in 103 Basic Medical Sciences building. Dr. Julius AxeLrod, chief of the Laboratory Clinical Sciences at the National Institutes of Mental Health, wiH speak on "Noradrenaline: Fate and Control of its Metabolism." Axelrod was awarded the 1970 Nobel Prize jiontly with Ulf von Euler of Sweden and Bernard Kstz of Great Britain for their contributions to the understanding of the role of neurotransmitters in the function of the nervous system. Personnel names asst. director Jean Hunt Gaulden, former personnel specialist for Cehnese Corporation and W.R. Grace Co. in South Carolina, has been appointed assistant personnel director at UNC. Mrs. Gaulden will be responsible for guiding and planning, as well as other activities associated with the University's equal opportunities program. She will also deal with matters of staff counselling, grievance procedures, formal communications programs and administration of employe benefits. She assumes this new post after serving as personnel manager for the Cryovac Division, W.R. Grace & Company in Duncan, South Carolina, since 1966. Before that, she was personnel representative for Celanese Plastics Company, a division of the Celanese Corporation, in Greenville, S.C. from 1964 to 1966. rt The University's' new assfstu personnel director earned her bachelor's degree in psychology at Winthrop College in 1953 and her MjV. in psychology from Furman University in 1960. N AT RD BAR JAMES FIRST ALBUM C T j i 1 III va( ; 1 1 mm Ti s. - i i a x. i i r.i.i.- iu r.ivi. Sunday i 0