Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / June 10, 1971, edition 1 / Page 17
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18 The Tar Heel Thursday, June 10, 1971 Plans for the coming academic year in Student Government are being made this summer by Student Body President Joe Stallings and his staff. Mickey Thigpen is laying the groundwork for a student information bureau to provide academic, athletic and social information to a greater extent than the Carolina Union Information Desk can handle. Cam West is consulting experts from the State Board of Higher Education and is looking at situations on other. campuses to collect information for academic reforms. The possibility of setting up a student co-op to handle the trading and selling of such items as books and supplies is being researched by Bob Slaughter and Robert Wilson. Wilson is also conducting long-range studies on services and programs needed in residence colleges. A statewide student conference to be held in the fall on the Chapel Hill campus is being planned by Butch Rooks and Charles Jeffress. The purpose of the conference, explained Stallings, is to exchange information and to discuss political problems students face. ECOS summer recruiting Brum ZfdMtof M While you are at it, Psychology Today Games will sharpen your understanding of yourself and others. Now play all three games and save $5.00. mm THE BODY TALK GAME How do you say "I love you" without using words? That's the type of mind-stretching new challenge awaiting you in BODY TALK, The Game of Feeling and Expression. Play it in groups of up to 10 to learn about how to express love, joy, hope, admiration, contentment, shyness, indifference, fear, frustration, loneliness, sorrow, hate and anger without using words. When you play BODY TALK, you can communicate with your mouth tied behind your back. You open a new world to yourself about the way you communicate with others. What is the meaning behind the way you knit your eyebrows or wrinkle your nose or xratch you chin when you talk? If you haven't paid attention to your mannerisms before, you may be missing something important. Play BODY TALK and see. $6.00. THE CITIES GAME Now you can fight back against urban tension, corrupt politics, and all you've ever hated about the city by playing THE CITIES GAME. You'll take the role of either Government, Business, Slum Dweller or Agitator, and the fireworks will follow. Issues like race riots, teacher strikes, and demonstrations against the city's leading businesses will come up. You're right if you are thinking of THE CITIES GAME as ideal for adult and classroom play. $6.95. THE BLACKS & WHITES GAME Experience the ghetto. Live on welfare. Become a target for police harassment. Try to buy into a white suburb. Blacks, though still victims of discrimination, become the agents of change. The idiom of money and property is enriched with educational factors, black power politics, and illogical luck. $6.95. All Three For Only $14.85. ' BILLY ARTHUR, INC. Eastgate 9 to 9 Mon.-Fri. 9 to 5:30 Sat. by Lynn Smith Staff Writer ECOS is expanding its bicycle rentals and publishing programs this summer in spite of sharply reduced membership caused by the turnover of students. ECOS has applied for $950 of a fund set up by the League of Women Voters to combat air pollution. If the money is granted it will be used to promote the use of "bicycles in Chapel Hill and extend the" bicycle rental services now offered, according to ECOS spokesman Charles Jeffress. Approximately one half of the monev I Dandelion Special Summer School Poster Sale Steal them for $.50 each Large selection will be used for a safety campaign and establishing bicycle routes throughout the Chapel Hill area. The other half will be used to purchase new bicycles for the rental service. At the present time the rentals are continuing with the equipment available. The publishing efforts of ECOS are also continuing, although their most . important publication, Elephants and Butterflies, may soon be taken over by a professional publishing company. Win thro p and Doubleday have both expressed interest in continuing publication on a national scale. The booklet, dealing with methods of contraception, is now in its third printing. Most of the 20,000 copies of the last edition were mailed to other parts of the state. Jeffress said the political activities of the organization this summer will center on exposing the environmental consequences of such proposed projects as the nuclear power plant in Chatham county. The safety of the plant is doubted since many of the protective systems are untested. One of the new ECOS projects for the summer is the recycling of used paper. Pick-up stations will be established in several areas of Chapel Hill. The paper will be taken to Raleigh where a company will buy it and process it for reuse. Interested students may contact Charles Jeffress or the ECOS office in Suite B of the Student Union. - ' J June 10th, 1971. ADVENT today introduces the wbrld's first truly high-fidelity cassette deck. The Model 201. ADVENT MODEL 201 - PRODUCT DESCRIPTION. The Model 201 incorporates the various elements necessary for high fidelity recording and playback of tapes in the home. The transport is a proven heavy duty mechanism capable of inaudible wow and flutter, and long trouble-free performance. Its fast wind times and extremely accurate tape counter enable the user to index individual selections with a repeatability and ease approaching that of discs. A simple and foolproof mechanical shut-off retracts the heads and pinch roller at the end of a cassette or if a faulty cassette jams. The electronics, completely designed and manufactured at Advent, have lower noise and distortion and greater overload capability than any known tape so that they in no way limit performance. Distortion (both IM and HD) in the electronics are typically less than 0.1. The 201 also incorporates the Dolby System, an absolute necessity for low noise high fidelity tape recordings. By using a 2 micron gap, the recordplay head is free from gap saturation that might otherwise limit dynamic range. The 400Hz saturation level achieved on Crolyn tape is about 8 dB above a flux level of 200 nanoWebers per meter (OVU). The 201 also incorporates full bias and equalization provisions for both iron oxide and chromium dioxide tapes, as well as the convenient single meter recording indicator. No other deck incorporates such equalization. The Dolby System, incorporated in the Model 201, affords an additional 10db of noise Free demonstrations at Trov's reduction further qothe ' quietest. today from 10 til 6. Friday until 9. There's more news from Advent. Let us tell you. Troy's Stereo Center, Inc., with the southeast's best-equipped and staffed customer service labs, is in the unique position of being able to give your valuable equipment the immediate qualified attention it deserves. As a Troy's customer you have access to Troy's technical knowledge and testing facilities. The Customer "nrvice Department exists only for voti . STEREO CENTER 1 13 North Columbia St. 942-3162 (New Location - Old Pickwick)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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June 10, 1971, edition 1
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