Saturday. May 1, 1971 i O n j I f I i . ! A -5 I Hi 1MB i if n The Daily Tar Heel TTT) Ho Tl O n 71 TTTI i fTs 101W0S liliiilJ.VUii. Israelis not softening stance - An Israeli cabinet member said Friday Israel will tell Secretary of State William P. Rogers that neither "compensation nor temptation" could make it soften its stance regarding an agreement to reopen the Suez Canal. Israel Galili. minister without portfolio and a close friend of Prime Minister Golda Mei, said in an interview with the newspaper Yedioth Aharonoth that Rogers would find a determiend nation when" he comes to Israel Thursday on his tour of the Middle East. "I believe Mr. Rogers will find in Israel a united nation strongly convinced of the justice of its demands," Galili said. "And if there still are hopes in the State Department that it is possible to erode the Israeli position or to soften it by compensation or temptation, it will be made clear to him there is no basis for this hope." While Israeli newspapers were reporting strained relations between the United States and Israel over the peace efforts, Egyptian Informtion Minister Mohamed Fayek accused the Americans of pro-Israeli bias. "The .American Middle East position has not changed," Fayek said in an interview with the Cairo radio' and television magazine. "It is still fully helping Israel militarily and economically." U.S. attacks Laos supply dump SAIGON-U.S. fighter-bombers attacked a Communist supply dump in Laos Friday and pilots reported smashing tons of munitions in what was described as one of the most successful raids of the war. More American bombs fell on the A Shau Valley in South Vietnam to protect a budding allied offensive. The U.S. Army took another long stride toward "vietnamizing" the war by deactivating two of its three major ground commands. Elsewhere, Communist gunners shot down a U.S. Army AH1 Cobra helicopter gunship flying over the Central Highlands, and both crewmen were killed. It was the ' 1,937th American helicopter shot down in South Vietnam in 10 years of war. In Cambodia, Communist pressures around the village of Ang Snuol, 12 miles southwest of the capital of Phnom Penh, closed a stretch of Highway 4 and isolated the important city of Kompong Speu. Government reindicts 6 for plot HARRISBURG, Pa.-In a move to strengthen its case, the government Friday re-indicted six peace activists on additional charges and indicted two more persons in its investigation of an alleged plot to kidnap Presidential advisor Henry A. Kissinger. A federal grand jury re-indicted the Rev. Philip Berrigan and five others and indicted Mary Cain Scoblick,32, a former nun, and John Theodore Glick, 21, now serving a prison sentence at Ashland, Ky., for vandalizing a draft board and FBI offices m Rochester, N.Y. - ' - ". In addition, the grand jury dropped three persons, including Berrigan's brother, Daniel, also a priest, and two others who had been named co-conspirators in the original indictment. Moore gets liquor-by-the-drink RALEIGH Moore County, the sandhills home and resort for many wealthy and retired Easterners, was given the right Friday to be the first of Horth Carolina's counties to vote on the controversiailiquor-by-the,-drink question. .: ri The State Senate approved 21 -1'2 a House-passed bill that would permit 15 per cent jB the voters in the county to petition for a referendum. The action marked the first time the General Assembly has approved a mixed drink: question that has been debated time after time in recent years. " ' bY km-hUW "ONLY 5 WANTED Ut STUDENT XSIS OWATSHBSDS OCA C & ft 5 3? ST CD (Ally SXE2S) " es)(l (el OPATC2ISS o: OT-SHXRTS ocnoovzss ST7ZWSZtiZSXl ' YOU PAY SHIPPING CHARGE (LESS THAN $500 ANYWHERE) SEND TO: LIQUA-LUV KATERJEDS, 237 INDUSTRIAL CECTER, SAUSALITO, CALIF. ,94965 , DEPT. A A 1 CEKTLEMES, ENCLOSED IS f!Y CHECK OR MOSEY ORDER FOR THE AMOUNT OF $29.95,PLEASE RUSH A KATERBED AT ONCE TO: - NAME ' ADORES S CITY STATE ZIP SIZE(CHECK ONE) KINS QUEEN DOUBLE SINGLE I UNDERSTAND THAT IF I AH NOT COMPLETELY SATISFIED I CAN RETURN THE WATERBED, WITHIN TEN DAYS. FREIGHT PREPAID, AND MY NOSEY KILL BE .REFUNDED III FULL. SEND INFO ON STUDENT REP PROGRAM. ODAY-4:30-7:30i (o)2) SPANISH MEAT LOAF Two Vegetables & Bread ACCHA Back Of The Zoom Djnnmjc Vi t 1 V --"f Fanavisktt Technic V iiGPcal ' ... i-i I HELD OVER AT 3:20 5: 158:00 ; . j I T jAWtS H KiCHOiSOM ne SAMUCi 2 AftKOf f irnert I I ANNA CALOER-MARSHALL TIMOTHY OALTON' .m EMILY BR0NTrs e h -.i COiOf) by An Amocar STARTS FRIDAY 3-5-7-9 ' " ' ' I r - v.,.. . ! - " - ' i ' 1 . -. j I ": f ' r " ' I . ---- I ' " I ! I ! . , I . I v. . N ' -v'-' :'". I ' ' i r f t .. v. ' Ux-j.::. ... .c-. : lA'ri -7v av".; - v:;- v47 -,fl? . -V .f-.a's1: i ! f.yT: V. ,rK J ) V'v V ; ' . vl 7 v Frank Barlow, a black belt holder in Karate, Judo, Jiu Jitsu and Aikido, is shown breaking 14 inches of bricks with his head. Barlow is currently the director of the Eastern Carolina Martial Arts Academies and will be speaking at 9 p.m. Tuesday to the Campus Crusade for Christ. Any student is welcome to attend the meeting on the fourth floor of Dey Hall. Stephanie Bolick, a freshman from Hickory, has been appointed Director of Internal Affairs by Joe Stallings, president of the student body. "We hope to let Stephanie run the day-to-day operations of the presidential office so Joe and I can concentrate oa the issues," said Cam West, special assistant to Stallings. As an administrative assistant, Miss Bolick has been conducting the interviews for the Chancellor's Advisory Committees. She will also be advising Stalling on the selection of committee members. Miss Bolick was social secretary of the freshman class. A spring pledge of Kappa Delta sorority, she is a member of the Women's Forum, a committee of the Association of Women Students and the office of Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael. She was also appointed to the Freshman Council created by former student body president Tom Beilo and was selected as a delegate to the State Student Legislature. " "Stephanie's done a lot to take the burden off Cam and I in the administrative operations of the office," commented Stallings. "We are pleased to have her on our staff." Stallings has been in the process of composing an office staff, administrative Stephanie Bolick assistants and various commitee chairmen. The remainder of the presidential appointments are- expected next week. "We hope that by now we've formulated an office staff that can help any student with any problem," said Stallings. IS I ews aro camvus. Pharmacy School sets computer conference The UNC. School of Pharmacy will sponsor a conference on "Computer-Based Information Systems in the Practice of Pharmacy," July 1 8-21 . The conference will examine in depth the information requirements that computer-based systems must meet. These include third party payments for - prescription drugs, drug interactions and adverse reactions, drug recalls and other measures that effect the practice of pharmacy and patient care. ' . 'The pharmaceutical industry and profession has long recognized the need tfor -automated., i Systems .tQiaccomodate IdramaticJ explosion iVall areas.' . Di George P. Hager said. Dr. Hager, dean of the UNC School of Pharmacy, is conference director. Paul. D. Olejar, director of Drag Information Programs at the UNC .School of. Pharmacy is conference coordinator. Featured speakers for the conference include Dr. Vernon E. Wilson, administrator, Health Services and Mental Health Administration, Department of Health, Education and Welfare; Dr. Keith M. Weikel, director, Division of Health Evaluation, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Washington, D.C.; and Dr. David P. Jacobus, vice president, Basic Research, Merck, Sharp and Dohme, Rahway, N.J. California chemist to speak Monday Dr. T.A. Geissman of the Department of Chemistry,. .University. of ! California will present the 1971 Hartung Memorial Lecture Monday at the UNC School of Pharmacy. The speech is at 8 p.m. in Beard Auditorium. Dr. Geissman's presentation is ''Structural and Biosynthetic Relationships in Sesquiterpene Lactone." Dr. Geissman is the author of over 200 articles on chemistry of natural products, plant phenalic compounds, terpenoid compounds and alkaloids. He is the author of the textbook, "Principles of Organic Chemistry and Organic Chemistry of Secondary Plant Metabolism." Preschool art show set at Wesley Foundation An exhibit of preschool art made by four-year-olds, under the direction of Sue Anderson, will be held at the Wesley Foundation beginning Sunday. The exhibit is entitled 'The Four-Year-Old and His Art: A Step Forward "hi Growth and Perception." Its focus is that children create what they experience and experience what they create. The exhibit demonstrates how a child's uniqueness is reflected in his art. Painting, chalk, clay, collage, construction and mobiles are included. The Wesley Foundation at 214 Pittsboro Street is open 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. The exhibit will run through May 31. For further information call 942-4763. 1 BEER BEER THE SHACK Come In Before It Falls In HAPPY HOUft Bveryti'rjht 7:30-8:30 Plenty Parking 120 VV. Rosemary (rent-a-car Only : $4,00 A Day, $.04 A Mile (BUT YOU MUST BRING THIS AD) Rent-AT-Bird f8.00 A Day, $.08 A Mile CROWELL LITTLE MOTOR CO. Durham 544-3711 Dir No. 011885 Chapel Hill 942-3143 It fl (5 7- nrrfs Coordinated study of history, arts, literature and architecture. Six week program offers three courses ... up to JO credits. All credits transferable. Includes special weekend tour from Rome to Naples, Herculaneum, Pompeii, Paestum and Capri. Includes special weekend tour from Athens to Delphi, Hagios Loukas, Mycenae, Tiryns, Nauplion, Epidaurus. Special low cost student tours (optional) to Florence, Etruscan Italy and Greek Islands. Students free to tour' Europe during 10 day Intersession. Specially selected Pace Faculty. Program begins June 1 1 and ends August 1- All inclusive cost: S1,300. For more information Write or call Dr. Harold Lurier, Director Pace Summer Sessions Abroad Telephone: (212) 235-3453 i 4&ik .jfSBh. Bk. ( )) f mW I "SffrM gssehA Mp nr coil - N Or- 100 : I i I I J i What you should know about diamonds when you know it's for keeps Jf. a.- -4 i f i - I ai.iil i You've dreamed about your diamond engagement ring a thou sand times. But now that you know it's for keeps, it's time to stop dreaming and start learning about diamonds and their value. Because no two diamonds are exactly alike, jewelers have adopted exacting standards to de ' termine the relative value of each and every diamond in the world. These standards include a dia mond's size (carat weight), color, cut and clarity. I L J Although it's important to know the facts about diamonds, you certainly don't have to be an expert to choose a Keepsake Dia mond Ring . . . because Keepsake guarantees a diamond of fine white color, correct cut and perfect clar ity or replacement assured. The fa mous Keepsake certificate provides permanent registration, trade-in value and protection against loss of diamonds from the setting. COLOR: Fine white diamonds are quite rare and valued accordingly. Other shades in relative order of their worth are: blue, yellow, brown and black. CUT: The cut of a diamond the facets placed on it by a trained cutterbrings out the gem's fire and brilliance. Anything less than correct cut reduces beauty, bril liance and value. CLARITY: Determined by the ab sence of small impurities. A per fect diamond has no impurities when examined under ten power magnification by a trained eye-. CARATr A diamond's size is measured in carats. As a diamond increases in size, its price will increase cien more if the quality remains constant. But larger dia monds of inferior quality may ac tually be worth less than smaller, perfect diamonds. j Your Keepsake Jeweler has a complete selection of new styles. He's in the Yellow Pages under "Jewelers." Or. dial free day or night long distance 800-243-0000. In Connecticut, call 800-942-0655. Keepsake REGISTERED DIAMOND RINGS HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Send new 20 pg. booklet. "Planning Your Engagement and Wedding" plus full color folder and 44 pg- Bride's Book gift offer all for only 25r. S71 c-u.. KEEPSAKE, BOX 90, SYRACUSE, NEW YORK 13201 sr, to $10 CeO T-d Mj't ftf. A. H. Co.