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The Daily Tar Heel
Tuesday . March 23. 1971
Marcus to head WCAR
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Toby Joak, a senior art major, was working on an impromtu sculpture Monday
afternoon beside Ackland Art Museum. Joak brought the core of his sculpture with
him, then put on the finishing touches with whatever happened to be laying around
on the ground. (Staff photo by Leslie Todd)
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oiioimg hod0 OTMsewirs
by Bob Chapman
r i . Staff Writer
The Campus Orientation Commission
is now seeking counselors to help advise
incoming freshmen in the fall.
Chairman Steve LaTour said interviews
for the 450 needed counselors are being
held in the residence colleges. Anyone
interested, he said, should check
dormitory bulletin boards for the time
and place of the interviews.
The interviews are being conducted by
residence college coordinators for each
college and for independent dorms.
Interviews for fraternities, sororities and
other off-campus students will be held
April 5-6 from 7 to 9 p jn. in the Carolina
Union.
The basic qualifications of a counselor
are sincerety and an interest in helping
new students adjust to Chapel Hill and to
the University, LaTour said.
Even though some 3,700 new students
RIDING HORSES: Horses for rent $2.50 per
hour. Unlimited riding area. Will also board
horses for $35.00 per month. Contact Steve
Pendergraf t anytime 967-5767
FOR SALE: '67 Yahama 305cc, "Big Bear
Scramber" streettrail. Engine just overhauled.
Excellent acceleration and torque. 968-9068.
Ride needed for 2 people to or near Orlando,
Florida over spring vacation. Please call
967-2544 after 7 p.m. Will share expenses.
GRADUATE STUDENT, age 24, wishes to
share furnished apartment both summer
sessions with other girl(s). Call
Collect-Rosemary Pukal at 703-361-4570.
Manassas, Va.
ATTENTION!! Direct Sales Distributors: Are
you interested in a BETTER DEAL? Call collect
(714) 772-2811. Mr. R.H. Cloud, Interstate
Engineering Co., Anaheim, California 92805.
Two students need ride to NYC Mar. 25 or 26.
Will share expenses. Call 933-4909.
GENERAL SPORTS COUNSELORS: Archery,
baseball, track, golf, basketball for resident
summer boys' camp. Call 929-2672. R.N. with
sons for resident summer camp call 929-2672.
WANTED: 2-bedroom house or apt. for student
couple for next year, beginning June 1. Call
with ANY information 933-4106 or 966-3300,
afternoons.
AUTHENTIC AFRICAN MATERIALS.
CARVINGS & B ATI K. African Batik & Fabric
Shop, Room 18, CCB Bank Building, 105 N.
Columbia St.
Girl needs ride to Detroit or anywhere near
there on or aftpr Friday, March 26. Call
967-6443.
WATER SKI BEHIND A SAILBOAT? That's
right, with Hobie Cat. Save $150-$200 on a
new boat. Limited time. Call 933-2652 for
details.
RIDERS WANTED: to Madison, Wisconsin. To
share driving and expenses. Leaving Friday. Call
542-2648 Pi ttsboro evenings.
FOR SALE: 69 Honda 175 Scrambler with
helmet; clean, good condition. Best offer. Call
967-6062 after 5 p.m.
FOUND: One small, female light-brown puppy
with shaggy fur. Wearing harness. Please call
Lee Galloway at 21 1 Manly, 933-9376.
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are expected in the fall, LaTour hopes the
orientation , can be more, . personal .than
ones in the past. Residence colleges will
be emphasized in the program. Each
college will be asked to have a program to
help orient new students.
In addition, LaTour said, the
Orientaiton Commission will try to have
all campus groups represented. Activities
designed to appeal to all the incoming,
students will include seminars on military
obligation with representatives from the
draft counseling service and from ROTC,
sex, drugs and public affairs.
The orientation will last from Aug. 24
through Sept. 1, LaTour said. He added
he thought the period was too long and
would prefer a four to five day period at
most.
Much of the time, however, will be
spent in testing since there will be no
summer preregistration session, LaTour
added.
SURF'S UP! Surfboard for sale like new.
Morey-Pope Magnum, 7'9", adjustable skeg.
Call 967-4502.
JET TO EUROPE $189.00
NY-LONDON-NY June 9-Aug. 25
UNC Flights, 201 Carolina Union
SUMMER IN EUROPE!
StudentFaculty Flights:
May 29-July 28: $199
June 11 -Aug. 28: $205
June 29-Aug. 18: $230
942-7289 evenings
OPENING FOR ASSISTANT ADVERTISING
DIRECTOR: Multi-faceted growth industry in
Eastern North Carolina desires assistant
Advertising Director who has professional-level
skills in writing and newspaper ad layout but
will be involved in all media. This is an ideal
position for a June graduate who wants an
outstanding career in advertising. If interested,
you must act quickly. Reply to Box 3665.
Fayetteville, N.C. 28305
ROOMMATE WANTED: April Ist-Duke
Manor Apt. Free health club new 2-bdrm.
apt. Call Roger Sparks after 7 p.m. 383-2741.
NEED A FEMALE ROOMMATE? I need a
place to live within walking distance to campus
immediately. Call 967-5596 afternoons and
nights.
ROOMMATE WANTED for two-bedroom apt.
Located less than 1 mile from the Old Well.
Apt. located at 40 Davie Circle. No. 8. $57.00
per person.
SURFBOARD WANTED: Wanted to buy
reasonably priced surfboard in very good
condition from 6' to 8. Call 933-8078
FOR SALE: Honda 50cc. $100. Excellent
condition, dependable, ideal transportation
around Chapel Hill. Must sell. Bought larger
bike. Call 967-4605.
15 girls needed for part-time telephone work.
No experience necessary. Good hourly wage
Apply Suite 201, 310 West Franklin Street 9
a.m. 7 p.m.
15 men needed for light delivery work in
Chapel Hill area. Must have own transportation;
either motorcycle or car. Good daily pay'
Apply Suite 201. 310 West Franklin Street.
TIRED OF LUMPS? Try a waterbed for only
$35. Firm, gentle support. Call 942-3050.
King-size mattress guaranteed 20 years.
WANTED: Adult to act as chaperone for ten
17-year-olds on 2-week camping tri-j. All
expenses paid. Call 967-1151 or 942-6907.
by Woody Doster
Staff Writer
Jon Marcus, station manager-elect of
campus radio station WCAR, has been
confirmed by the station's Board of
Directors.
The Board is composed of two
representatives from each residence
college and one from each fraternity and
sorority that subscribes to WCAR.
Marcus, a native of New RocheUe,
N.Y., is a first year graduate student in
the Department of Radio, Television and
Motion Pictures. He received a B.A. in
history from Lafayette University in
Easton, Penn.
Marcus' main goal in office is "to
News aroeed.
'Woyzeck scheduled
for Thursday night
A special performance of "Woyzeck,"
one of the 10 U.S. plays selected for the
American College Theatre Festival in
Washington, D.C., will be presented at 8
p.m. Thursday in Memorial Hall.
Tickets will be available at the door
for$l.
The Carolina Playmakers will present
"Woyzeck" in the nation's capital' at
Ford's Theatre March 29-30.
The Festival is presented by the John
F. Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts and the Smithsonian Institution and
is produced by the American Educational
Theatre Association. Sponsors are
American Airlines, American Oil and
American Express.
"Woyzeck" was nominated for the
Another plan to help make orientation ,
more personal is .to maks.Gneral College,
advisors more available for : personal i
problems. In addition, counselors will be
asked to send letters to the eight students
they will be helping during the
orientation period.
Counselors are asked to bring any
gripes or suggestions to their interviews.
All prospective counselors will meet for a
training session in mid-April to become
familiarized with their duties.
VISIT
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Chapel IGIl im
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Also be sure to visit our new top & bottom shop for the neatest
look in. casual pants and accessories to match. It's over the HUB.
Look for the red, white, & blue awning beside the HUB
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make WCAR the number one station in
listenership on campus."
"I want to expand the station to
include as many students as possible," he
said. "We plan to get more people on
campus involved in our operation and
more people on campus listening to the
station."
Marcus feels he can accomplish three
aims by "efficient management" of the
station coupled with "heavy promotion"
on campus.
"We want people to know that WCAR
is here to serve them," Marcus said. "It is
UNCs radio station and we want people
on campus to listen to us and participate
with us."
He believes WCAR can be "one of the
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national festival form the 10-state
Southeast region following competition
in Abbeville, S.C. in January.
The Playmakers' production was one
of 239 college and university theatre
productions which entered the regional
competitions in the fall. The Southeast
region submitted 35 entries, more than
any of the 13 regions. North Carolina
entered 11 plays, second highest in the
country after California.
Sponsors reminded
of check recipient
Students who participated in the Walk
Against Hunger Saturday should make
sure their sponsors make checks payable
to The American Freedom from Hunger
Foundation.
Although it will take several days to
tally the total amount of money brought
in from the march, the YMCA estimates
that between $10,000 and $12,000 was
collected.
Of the approximately 570 participants
in the walk, more than 300 were reported
to have completed the 25-mile course.
Chamber Singers set
for concert today
An entire concert of a cappella music
will be offered by University Chamber
Singers on the Music Department's
Tuesday Evening Series, March 23, at 8
p.m. in Hill Hall.
Presently consisting of 15 members,
the ensemble was organized last year by
its director, Stafford Wing, instructor of
voice in the Music Department. Each
singer is a soloist in his own right, but all
are not voice or even music majors.
TOWER
the
OPTICIAN
j. Paul MOORE
960-8010
Prescriptions Filled
Lenses Duplicated - Sunglasses
Contact lenses Accessories
OUR BEAUTIFUL LOCATION IN UNIVERSITY SQUARE
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Be sure and stop by the HUB for
your spring vacation wardrobe of
fashions. We have the most
complete selection fo spring
clothing and accessories in this
area. Whether you're going to the
beach or for a relaxed visit at
home, we have just what you need.
And they are all at the most
reasonable prices;
FRANKLIN ST.
Lakewood Shopping
Durham
Center
best campus radio stations in the United
States."
Marcus said WCAR will be challenging
the other media which reach the campus,
The Daily Tar Heel, WKIX and WCHL, in
all aspects.
"We plan to make WCAR a major
news source on campus by expanding our
news staff," he said. WCAR is currently
operating with a 10-man staff, counting
part-time "stringers."
"We can provide a different kind of
news service to students than the Daily
Tar Heel can," Marcus siad. '"While the
Tar Heel comes out once a d3y, six days
per week, WCAR is on the air 24 hours
per day, seven days a week."
While the radio medium doesn't lend
The UNC group is uniquely versatile
and particularly adept in presenting a
cappella (unaccompanied) music.
Director Wing maintains versatility as the
Chamber Singer's keyword. Their
concerts are always well received owing
to the high quality of their performance.
The program, which is free and open
to the public, will open with three
madrigal by John Dowland. The first half
of the program will close with a mass by
Josquin des Prez, the "Missa de Beata
Virgine." After intermission, the
Chamber Singers will offer a wide variety
of 20th century music, including some
humorous and serious songs by Paul
Hindemith; three poems set to music by
Samuel Barber; and three songs in French
by Ravel.
Hesse is subject of
Wednesday lecture
German novelist Hermann Hesse,
author of 'Steppenwolfe" and
"Siddhartha," is the topic of a lecture by
Dr. Theodore Ziolkowski of Princeton
University at 8 p.m. Wednesday in 101
Greenlaw Hall.
The lecture, sponsored by the UNC
German Department, is in English. The
public is invited.
Ziolkowski is described one of the
foremost authorities on modern German
literature. His most recent books are
"The Novels of Hermann Hesse" and
"Dimensions of the Modern Novel." He
has written articles on Goethe, Kafka,
Camus and James Joyce.
A native of Alabama, Ziolkowski
received his B.A. and M.A. from Duke
University and his Ph.D. from Yale
University. He taught at Yale and
Columbia before becoming a full
professor at Princeton at the age of 32.
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Reg. Licensed
Optician
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itself to in-dcpth studies, he commented,
it can be the first to break major stories.
"Our staff currently covers local nes
and we depend on the ABC Network for
national news," Marcus said. "Riht now
we are lackir.g in state level news, but
with our expanded staff we hope to
correct this."
Marcus believes his advertisirj;
department is "doing very well."
"They have enabled us to become
financially independent and I foresee
growing advertising revenues," he said.
He noted WCAR produces 90 per cent
of the commercials it runs. "We feel our
commercials are superior to any others
you will hear in this area," he said.
In sports, WCAR will continue its
exclusive coverage of UNC varsity
baseball games this spring and will cover
UNC junior varsity football and
basketball next semester.
"We will seek in the near future to get
the rights to carry UNC varsity football
and basketball games from the Tar Heel
Sports Network," Marcus continued.
"Our engineering staff needs more
people," he stated, "because of our
expanding operation."
He said it was difficult to get qualified
personnel at WCAR because there is no
engineering school at UNC. "However, we
are willing to train any interested
people."
WCAR's broadcasts are carried
through telephone wires to a transmitter
in the living unit which residents must
buy for "S350-S450." The station will
pay for maintenance on the line.
"We are doing very well as an
alternative to WCHL and WKIX,"
commented Marcus. "We don't program
for 13-year-olds or housewives, just for
UNC students."
He believes this philosophy affects
every aspect of the station's operation.
"We are not condescendign, we treat our
listeners as intelligent people." "We are
not condescending, we treat our listeners
as intelligent people."
Marcus was elected by the WCAR staff
for a one-year term.
"I don't think the station manager of
WCAR should be an office elected by the
students at large, as is the editor of the
Tar Heel," Marcus related.
"A radio station, like a newspaper, is a
business," he said. "It is almost
impossible for the average student to
know the qualifications a good station
manager should have."
'He noted that WCAR prides itself in'
being a nonpolitical station. A general
election, Marcus believes would turn the
position into "political chaos."
Marcus plans to enter the
programming or management aspect of
radio or television after he receives his
M.A.
As an undergraduate he was program
director, business manager and later
general manager of station WJRH, an
educational FM radio station owned by
Lafayette University.
Northwestern Wutuol Life Ins. Bfdg.
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