Monday. September 13. 1 9 T 1
News around campus
holds rush today, Tuesday
APO
The Dailv Tar Heel
Formal ruoh for the Alpha Phi Omega
(APO) service fraternity will he held
today and Tueviay, from 7-9 p. m. sr. the
South Lounge of the Student Union.
All undergraduate men. inciting
freshmen and oc;al fraternity rr. -.: .
are eligible for participation m ruh.
Rick V.h'.eccr. publicity chiirmin.
hcted the three mam activities of the
fraternity ac the Campus Chest charity
drive, the Student Hook Co-op. and the
campus-v.ide lost and found,
"Sprmc n a big time for APO
services." Whutfecar said. "The main fail
activity v;;!! be the Carolina nr. 2 vale."
Campus tours for any individual or
group on campus are provided, tree of
charge, by APO members.
Invitations for membership in the
fraternity -a ill go out after next week's
meetings.
Push Chairman Don Morgan
encourages all interested to "come by.
meet the fellows, and learn about the
organization
Professors
win offices
'Ihree members of the UNC School of
Journalism have been elected to positions
within the Association for Education in
Journalism (ALJ).
Dean John B. Adams will serve as vice
president of the Journalism Council. Inc..
the A Ii J-sponsored research agency.
James J. Mullan was elected head of
the Advertising Division, and Maxwell
McCombs was elected to the association's
Committee on Research, one of its three
standing elected committees.
UNC faculty members also chaired
several sessions and presented papers at
the association's annual meeting, held at
amiDii,
The Student Aid Office is distributing
Mation.il Merit, Home Savings and Loan and
College f oundation checks at 300 Vance Hall
daily. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. (closed Saturday)
National Defense and UNC Loan checxs
which were awarded and accepted before Aug.
1, will also be available through September 15.
National Defense and UNC Loan checks which
were accepted after Aug. 1. in addttion to
Health Profession Loan checks will be available
on 3rd floor of Pettigrew Hall, Sept. 14 and 15,
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
All scholarships stipends have been
forwarded to the cashier's account of each
scholarship recipient and are being posted to
each student's account daily.
N.C. Prospective Teachers Scholarship Loan
stipends have been forwarded to the Cashier's
Office and should be posted in student's
accounts within a few days.
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
3
4
5
6
7
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9
10
11
16
13
20
22
25
27
29
Defraji
Pronoun
Limb
Atnletic group
St'Ct-ed
Natue Tieta-So-eaJ
ior
drying
Thick s'ice
Exists
Flap
Anima''s foot
Intoned
Obst'uct
Fimso
F3'se oed
1
Music: as
written
4
Short talk
8
Vessel
11 Mark left ty
wound
12 At this place
13 Exist
14 Note of sca!e
15 Cravat
17 Tangled
19 Higti mountain
21 Algonqatan
Indian
23 Small rug
24 Trinket
26 Definite aritcle
30 Number
3 Strip cf leather 32 Soak
31 Armed conflict
34 Condensed
moist jre
36 Sorrow
37 Shade tree
39 Swiss river
33 Conjunction
35 Expire
36 Pronoun
33 Wander
amlessly
41 Printer's
measure
42 Ancient
44 Make bee
45
47
49
Small lump
Send forth
Communist
Distance
measure
51
54
Deface
56 Canine
5S Female deer
59 Occur
62 Parcel of land
64 Exist
65 Everyone
65 Chair
63 Dry
70 Gc!f nound
71 Girl's
nickname
72 Lair
DOWN
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tantalum
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EXCISE
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1 AND I AE J
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the Ur. iver-itv of Sucith Carolina in
Co:umbia.
UNC faculty members who cha.reu
vesuns incl-ird Michael BishvD. Euzene
Shaw. McComrs and Adams, Those
presenting parers were Bishcp. Mullen,
hurer.e Shaw and Donald Shaw.
Graduate -.dent, who presented
pa;er- were T M. Co-r.ts Jr and Shirley
Eliel named
Kenan professor
Dr. Lrr.es: L. Li:.-, former chairman of
the hemr-tr department at Notre Dame
Unr.ers.ty, has een named William Rand
Kenan. Jr. professor of chemistry at
UNC
Id.el. a native of Cologne. Germany,
and an authority in stereo. hemistrand
conformational analysis, lias written 1 I
hooks and more than 150 articles, some
of them m collar, o ration. f o r
professional journals.
Lliel joined the Notre Dame faculty m
1048. He was named chairman of the
chemi-,try department in 1 964 and served
in that capacity until 1 66.
He served the past year as Du Pont
Lecturer j' the University of South
Carolina.
While at Notre Dame, Lliel served as
vice president of the American
Association of University Professors and
as president of the Notre Dame chapter
of Sigma Xi, scientific honorary society.
He received his doctor of physical
chemistry degree in 1946 from the
University of Havana and his Ph. D.
degree in organic chemistry in 1948 from
the University of Illinois.
Lliel was a National Science
Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at
Harvard University and the California
institute of Technology in 1958.
n t
activities calendar
There will be a meeting of the Carolina
Playrnakers on Tuesday. Sept. 14 at 4 p.m. in
103 Bingham Hall. Everyone is cordially invited
to attend.
A meeting for all students interested m
working at Murdoch Center will be held on
Monday, Sept. 13 at 7:30 p.m. in the Student
Union.
Applications for Toronto Exchange are
available at the Student Union desk Sept. 10
thru Sept. 24. An interview schedule will be
posted. Please sign and keep your appointment.
Underclassmen and graduate students are
encouraged to apply.
There will be a dance at UNC-G at 8 p.m.
Monday, Sept. 13, in Elliot Hall on the campus.
The dance is for incoming freshmen and
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Carrboro board
to discuss suit
The Carrtsro Btard of Aldermen w;Ii
discuss T-esday the latest brief filed ty
the Attorney General's office in the
University's suit against Carreer;. to
.ollect the town's unpaid water bill
The board well meet a: ":30 :r. the
Carrboro Town Hall.
The Attorney General's office filed a
brief last ;nne ask.ir.2 the court to strike
a f . v . c . . 2 u. t ....?... i. .j. i..e
University should be held to charging
fair and reasonable" rates. The court
ruled m favor of Carrborr.
In its latest brief, according to the
Carrboro town clerk, the Attorney
General's office has claimed that the
University's rate is "fair and reasonable."
The University raised its water rate in
July. 1970, by 120 percent. Carrboro has
refused to pay for water at the increased
rate. The suit is still pending.
Totten teaches
; Trees' course
Dr. Henry R. Totten, UNC professor
emeritus of botany, will instruct a special
non-credit course, "Trees." beginning
Wednesday at the University.
The course, offered by the UNC
L x tension Division, will deal with
identification of trees and how the life
cycles of trees contributes to the
ecological balance of nature.
Totten was a member of the botany
department faculty for 50 years and is
co-author of the book, "Trees of the
Southeast."
Dorothy Stokes. A UNC-G student, has invited
all Carolina men to attend. If there are any
questions, men may call Miss Stokes at
379-5095 or 379-5437.
Men and women interested in being draft
counsellors should come to an organizational
meeting Monday, Sept. 13 at 9 p.m. in the
Student Union. If you are unable to attend,
please leave your name and phone number in
the draft counseling office in Suite B (room
258) of the Union.
For women who want to be in the know,
Association of Women Students meeting,
Monday, Sept. 13, 6:45 p.m. Frank Porter
Graham Lounge.
All graduate students in Romance Languages
are urged to attend the first meeting of the
Rabano School of Dance
Register now for fall classes. Ballet,
tap, jazz. Beginner, Intermediate,
and Advanced. $3 per month. For
information call 967-3816.
The Dally Tar Heel Is published by the
University of North Carolina Student
Publications Board, dally except Sunday,
examination periods, vacations and'
summer periods.
Offices are at the Student Union
building, Univ. of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, N. C. 27S14. Telephone
numbers: News Sports 9 33-1 01 1 ;
9 3 3 '1012: Business, Circulation,
Advertising 933-1 163.
'A
Subscription rates:
$5.00 per semester.
$10.00 per year;
Second class postage paid at U. S. Post
Office In Chapel Hill, N. C.
The Student Legislature shall have
powers to determine the Student
Activities fee and to appropriate all
revenue derived from the Student
Activities fee (1.1.1.4 -of the Student
Constitution). The budgetary
appropriation for the 19 70-71 academic
year is $21,292.50 for undergraduates
and $4,64 7.50 for graduates as the
subscription rate for the student body
($ 1 .84 per student based on fall semester
enrollment figures).
The Dally Tar Heel reserves the right to
regulate the typographical tone of ail
advertisements and to revise or turn
away copy it consider objectionable.
The Daily Tar Heel will not consider
adjustments or payments for any
advertisement Involving major
typographical errors or erroneous
insertion unless notice is given to the
Business Manager within (1) one day
after the advertisement appears, or
within one day of the receiving of tear
sheets, of subscription of the paper. The
Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect insertion of
an advertisement scheduled to run
several times. Notices for such correction
must be given before the next insertion.
1
V.V!iVV.V.VVtV.ViVAVAV.V.V.v!v-
THAT PlPN'T EVEN COMB
VO05E TO W0RKKS
by Garry Trudeau
3 est s&ssrnnry
GROUP IN THE
LA&UE-
ATE V
0- K., 3 P
i n -
he UNC Exter
. IJ -. -
- n - -.- ;
Suicides 11th
in N.C. deaths
J-.. rs tir.xra ; : t.t iru-ir.g
ca-ises of death in North Carolina in
lo. a.cording : N.C State B:ard ;:
Health statistics.
In response to this problem the UNC
School o'. Social " r k d e ? '. ' r e d a
course in s uicidol rev - the tudv .-:'
velf-de-ruct:ve behav;;,-'
The course was deel oped last ear tor
the Nationa Center for Studies on Suicide
Prevention as part a national proje.t t r
evaluate materials f o r t e a c h i n 2
suicidoktgy to personnel workinc w ;th
crisis intervention.
Because of the shoal's effort- ;c:
semester, the suiddology v-our-e outline
and materials will be available from the
National Center for Studies Suicide
Prevention to other Schools o! social
work across the country.
The course was taught last sear by Dr.
Philip Cooke and Albert King. Student
projects completed for Cooke's
revealed more men than women in North
Carolina took their own lives - 422 men
as compared with 132 women.
According to Cooke, most people who
commit suicide first ask for help in some
way, and their plea i often ignored or
taken lightly.
T donLt think people are aware that
suicides are such a social problem."
Cooke said.
"There is a real need for special
training in this area."
Cooke added, "It would be beneficial
if all persons in our society could be
alerted to cues and signs of suicidal
tendencies in people."
Graduate Romance Association on Vonaay,
Sept. 13. at 4 p.m. m the Faculty Lounge on
4th floor of Dey Hall,
Any member of the UNC community
interested in forming a campus horse-riding
club contact Christine Lund at 929-39S8.
Auditions for the UNC Opera Theatre's
forth coming production of "Fiddier on the
Roof will be held on Wednesday and Thursday
of this week. All students and townspeople are
invited to try out. The auditions will be held at
7 p.m. on each night, with a recall session on
Friday at the same time. Applicants should
have one show-tune prepared, and will be
expected to sing at sight. Scripts will be
available all this week in Room a. Hill Hail.
Professor George Schiessmger will present a
paper entitled "Probabilistic arguments for the
Existence of a Divine Designer" at 3 p.m. on
Monday, Sept. 13 in 213 Caidweii Hall
Applications from faculty members for
log
WHAT IS
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or cone to
301 WEST FRAMKUI1 ST
Across from Hardee's
I
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K5i v
, n J
IP" MB
b
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' O l
Old Last is the oldest dormitory on the
trying to sel! it0 (Staff photo by Cliff K olov
grants under t"e v.i'er Hevnj'ce Mfy r
institute's Fiscal Year 1972-73 Mj'thm C -
Program will be accepted through Sep!. '
exceptions will be maae to . this cut.)"
Instructions to applicants ana ad-J :
information cars be obtained from the O'f,.
the Director, 124 Riddick B'd9., ':'!! C.
State University, Raietoh 2 7C07. r
755-28 15.
Hiilei invites au interested students to .:''f
the Modem Hebrew classes which are to
on Monday. Sept. 13 at 7:30 p.m. f rr fcea-'-.r
and 9 p.m. for intermediates. The . .- ,
taught by an Israeli, w-n continue :t -the
semester.
The Orange Count y Ass ".oat."-.
Retarded Children wilt meet m t Wev
Foundation on Tuesday, Sep:. 14. jt 7:30 p
All women IS-years-oid and up . '
to attend the first open general meeting co '
eague of Women voters of Chapei hu a
Carrboro on Wednesday. Sent 15 it f. p
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WEEKLY SPECIAL
Sept. 13-18
SEAFARER
DENIM WORKSHIRTS
20 OFF WITH
THIS AD
EASY TO FIND
WORTH FINDING
413 West Franklin St.
Up from the Carolina Grill
Prescriptions Accurate!.
Filled
Lenses Duplicated
Headquarters For Q .oiht.
Sunglasses
Contact Lenses FittcJ
Contact Lens Accesxjno
lit 1 1 a
(Opticians
942-3254
John and Lib Southern
121 E. Franklin St
Between Varsity Theatre and Intimate
1(1
limns