Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 31, 1971, edition 1 / Page 40
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Tuesday, August 31, 1971 uamBiis religions centers 1L O offer more than worship The Daily Tar Heel This year promises to be a bury one for the campus religious centers, and for students on campus eager to enter into different kinds of fellowships, there wiJl be plenty of opportunities. The Wesley Foundation, headed by Methodist chaplain Bob Johnson and one of the most active centers on campus, has a diverse slate of activities already lined up. Sunday worship services began Sunday and are held each Sunday at 1 1 a.m. with Holy Communion celebrated at the first of each month. A nursery service is provided. Beginning Friday, the Foundation will host a Friday buffet, where students can gather together over a meal and an occasional program. During the week, the Wesley Foundation runs a Coffee Houe and shows films, as well as houses regular art exhibitions. Johnson plans to run one or two retreats this fall. He also plans to organize several theology discussion groups for undergraduate students. A graduate group will begin meeting early in September. Beginning Oct. 17 and continuing for seven straight Sundays, the Wesley Foundation will present color films of the BBC. television show. '"Civilization." Lex Matthews, the Episcopal chaplain, has his office b-s:de the Porthole restaurant. Matthews is head of the Chapel H:I1 Drug Action Committee and is interested m working with students in the drug scene. He also phr.s to spend more time visiting dorms. Father Thomas Palko. the campus Catholic chaplain and director of the Newman Foundation, plans a whole series of activities for Catholic students. Encounter groups will be forming soon. The Newman Foundation also plans several "Christian Weekends" either in the mountains or at the beach, weekly Game Nights for the card players, Wine and Cheese parties with other centers, dramatic readings, and a lecture series. Catholic students interested in music are also invited to help Palko work out new forms of liturgical music. Mass is held daily for students at 12:15 and 5:15 p.m. Sunday masses are held at 9:30 a.m., 11 a.m., and 12:15 p.m. Use DTH Classifieds I o Grent Aiternntive-The Grent Alternntive-The Great Alternntive-TheO n & c P 1 n c I o n crpnn in J UlllL IDflfpP'7 EASTGATE SHOPPING CENTER BRINGS YOU T til- 'J ,ITisVw CORDUROY BELL BOTTOMS The look is wide and wild the fabric is pinwale cotton corduroy in rich colors that blend beautifully with the new shirts. Basic jeans construction that is traditionally Levi's. Slide into a pair or two - today! a The Pants Rack EAST GATE SHOPPING CENTER CHAPEL HILL, N. C. 967-6461 ALSO RIDGEWOOD SHOPPING CENTER-RALEIGH Z3 -1 All Catho!-: students planning to be married between n dw and January are asked to enroll in a Pre-Marriage course at the center. Jewish students can find a home at the Hillel Foundation. Among the activities envisioned by the new campus Rabbi. Robert Siegel. is the formation of a Free Jewish University. Siegel has only been on campus a few weeks. He had been the Jewish chaplain at Northwestern L'nr.ersity m Illinois. Jewish services will be held each Friday night at 7:30 beginning this Friday. A study group will meet at 11 a.m. on Saturday mornings. Non-denommational Christian groups will be beginning their fall activities as school opens. Campus Crusade for Christ, headed by recently arrived Ken Reid.has a house at 206 McCauley Street and holds weekly meetings all over campus. Carolina Christian Fellowship, headed by graduate student Roger Anderson, is an affiliate of Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship and will begin activities soon. Students are also invited to participate in the Baptist Student Union activities, the Lutheran Student Center, and the Church of Christ efforts. Local Chapel Hill churches provide numerous activities and services each week. J L J j L L u L u ! j it 1 1 T Senices are held weeklv in the Weslev Foundation, the Methodist student center on campus. International students plan full year The International Student Center. UNC's counselling service, and social organization serving the over 450 foreign students on campus, looks forward to a year highlighted by student-organized programs such as Orientation, International Week, Toronto Exchange, and the Speakers Bureau. In addition, the International Student Center continues its Carr dormitory (men) and Mclver dormitory (women) CRAFT WORKSHOP SUPPLIES AGENTS FOR wLECLERC 0 SEPTEMBER WORKSHOPS REGISTER NOW WEAVING MACRAME CERAMICS STITCHERY DECOUPAGE WOOD CARVING CHRISTMAS WORKSHOP Craft Library for Browsing 967-5450 Tues.-Sat. 10-5 Closed Sun., Mon. JONES FERRY ROAD (University Lake Road) U. S. Entry, 1971, Cannes Film Festival Winner, Best Actress. KITTY WINN j 'lOlh Century-Fox presents Siie panic In Bieedla park 1:20; 3:20; 5:20 7:20; 9:20 COMING LONESOME COWBOYS DRIVE, HE SAID Kadar's ADRIFT CLAIRE'S KNEE and more Including best shorts Visit Raleigh's Triangle Area's only ART THEATRE Aug. 30-31 -Sept. 1-2 HTM ii U ! ' George C Scott Last Run OPENS .c-r?t. 3rd WW with Florence Henderson living programs for foreign students, in which each resident student has an American student as a roommate. These groups, for the most part, coordinate the social events- parties commemorating international holidays, films, picnics, mixers, volleyball, soccer, daily afternoon tea-time, and various field trips (to such places as the Research Triangle, IBM, cigarette factories) availahle for the participation of all foreign students. This week the Center undertakes its first large-scale project, orientation for the more than 160 new foreign students. Undi the direction of Christian Stockfisch, the orientation counsellor, the Center's program provides materials and information aids for new students, which in addition to the center's counselling service, contribute to foreign student adjustment to campus life. Following orientation, planning for the rest of the year's highlighted projects must begin. There is the "International Week" in the spring, an annual activity during which all foreign students from the various continents perform folk culture, show movies, and cook their national dinners. The students, through the Student Center organization, also arrange for prominent speakers to address the assemblage, comprised of foreign and non-foreign students who take part in the "International Week" festivities. Then there is the Toronto Exchange Program, an annual cultural and personal exchange activity which appears early in the second semester this year. Those UNC students chosen by interviews take part in a one week study-observation of the University of Toronto (and the Toronto students come to UNC-CH) under the direction and sponsorship of the International Student Center. The Speakers Bureau of the Center till plans to nu:r.t.!i:i :s program involving !e.Usre- iits b . : : foreign students to s. h , ! J..vv: -across the state, with lectures n v., varied topics Brazilian culture. "J International Student Moe:ner,-American-German relations. Puerto R students and their politics. BuIm. .: "How to trael abro id w ithout :te:- ! anyone." A newly announced ,tii! p'. .- by the Center is .!dve:if..:e friendship." a pr .i : ? whuh internation.il students to . ( h.:p,l il family for ocvaM.n.iI ho-pit thH , sv.h phone calls, invitations to uo .r ..! , t, tenders of friendship In overview, the Intern.ition.il Stu ' Center. i t s e 1 1 . specializes i f r i e n il sh i p - i ni on g the ineml'.t themselves, between the members and th entire student population, between il members and the townspeople, an. eventually, between country and ctmnuy VECiUM POINT I I :' ACCOUNTANT FINE POINT A7 f iE PL -".T J J VEDIUV PC'NT OR FINE POINT STlfl dlENT ST RES UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA 'ON CAMPUS' 933-5066 8:30 A.M. - 9:00 P.M. Mon. - Fri. 8:30 A.M.- 1:00 P.M. Sat.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Aug. 31, 1971, edition 1
40
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