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The Daily Tar Heel .Frosk debaters reach semifinal. jylvw.w.v.v.v.'.v.'.v.v. ......, News around campus Antiwar group to organize tonight ViedwdY. October 6. 1971 in MTSU by Pam Phillips Staff Writer F reshman debaters Charlie Bond and Ion Dillard got to the Middle Tennessee Stj?e University Debate Tournament .emi-finals last weekend, before they a ere defeated by the University of Alabama. Bond and Dillard emerged from rrehmmary rounds with a 5-1 record. In j.mmation rounds, they defeated the azaar set today at Y by Lee Souther' .nd Staff Writer An organizational meeting for students r.t.rested in working for the YM-YWCA's -ghth annual International Handicrafts ,'iijar will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in he upstairs lobby of the Y Building. lorn Gilbert and Judy Gold, .( chairmen for the bazaar, are currently ruking plans for the bazaar to be held !).. 3, 4, and 5. Seven committees will be working on , :ri )us aspects of the bazaar. "Working for the bazaar is a great way ; learn about foreign cultures and jh-cultures in the United States," said ', ;Ir crt, "and this year we will need more people than in the past since the bazaar has expanded in so many directions." Miss Gold stressed the new aspect of the coffee house and entertainment i nmittee. "This is the first year we've heen able to use Memorial Hall for -nntinuous entertainment," she said. ' We hope to use the stage evenings for ; Ik singers, dancers and guitarists." Anyone interested in performing h ould leave their name and phone - imber in room 102 of the Y building. Students who feel they do not have ' e time to help with .he bazaar now, but v. aid like to, should consider working decorations or sales committees, j lording to the co-chairmen. The work t r these groups will be centered around Ik:. 3, 4, and 5. ft 3 3 u tourney University of Tennessee in the octo-finals and Toledo in the quarter-finals. The Alabama team, coached by former UNC debate coach E.C. Clark, won the tournament. Another team, freshman Cole Campbell and sophomore Kay Kernodle, came out of the pre-elimination rounds 3-3 and did not qualify for the elimination rounds. Miss Kernodle was named seventh speaker of the tournament. Coach Robert Cox was pleased with the performance of his freshmen teams. 'These were freshmen debaters at their first tournament," he said. "This was a varsity tournament. For them to qualify in itself is phenomenal. I expect a great deal from them." This year Cox is assisted by two graduate assistants, Tim Heinz and Harriet Cherberg. Heinz works mainly with the freshmen debaters and Miss Cherberg with the public series of debate now sponsored by the team. Heinz said, "I think all the participants did an outstanding job. They are off to a fine start." Experienced debaters Joe Loveland and Joe McGuire displayed their technique before a Pittsburgh audience during the public series sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh last weekend. The public series is an annual event in the Pittsburgh area. The University invites five of the outstanding teams in the country to debate before high school assemblies. Loveland said the Carolina team debated about nine times. "These debates are different from tournament debate," he said. "They are designed to please an audience and are much more comical than regular debates." Next weekend Bond and Dillard and Brent McKnight and Hewitt Rose will go with Miss Cherberg to the University of Kentucky for a tournament. Loveland and McGuire will accompany Cox and Heinz to the MIT Tournament, which they won lastyear. This year the tournament is not a national qualifying tournament, but is still important for the winning team. The Tar Heel debaters will host the Tarheel Invitational Debate Tournament the weekend of Oct. 16. Fifty-five teams have already made reservations. miro - fricdlacnder - dati XMBBIITIION one SAL fine GRAPHICS DUKE UNC N R I o 0 0 N PA B I L D G 0 1 the unicoRn OCT. 4,5 U N I 0 IM B L D G N. G A L L e R y 10AM. - 7 Ptt OCT. 6,7 cor it a - boulanger - shahn n O o ft o We want to talk to you about a career in law . . . without law school. When you become a Lawyer's Assistant, you'll be doing work traditionally done by lawyers work we think you'll find challenging and responsible. And Lawyer's Assistants are now so critically needed that The Institute for Paralegal Training can offer you a position in the city of your choice and a higher salary than you'd expect as a recent college graduate. You'll work with lawyers on interesting legal problems and the rewards will grow as you do. A representative of The Institute for Paralegal Training will conduct inter views on: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20 Inquire at Placement Office for exact location of interview NOTE If registration tor this seminar is filled, come anyway we II try to talk to you Or call us coiiect at the number shown below. The Institute for Paralegal Training i3:n?'oor 401 Walnut St Pbiia Pa 191C6 i?15i WA 5-0905 The UNC Student Mobilization Committee (SMC) will hold 2-. organizational meeting tonight to d:scus.s plans for the "opposition to the Vietnam War. Nat London, a spokesman for the National Peace Action Committee, an affiliate of SMC, will speak on phns for Veterans Day Oct. 25, the Student Stnke Nov. 3, and the Nov. 6 mass demonstrations. The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. m the South Lounge of the Student Union. "Our goal is to involve as many people as possible in peaceful, legal demonstrations built around immediate and total 'ithdraAal from Southeast Asia," London said, adding: "Many people are against the war tut don't know what to do. The most effective way is mass demonstrations." He said Nov. 6 will climax the fall campaign of anti-w3r activities with demonstrations in 16 U.S. cities. London said that "in no way has the Nixon administration shown any intention of stopping the war. They play the war in low key to cool people down so that the opposition will be less committed." Anyone interested in planning activities for the UNC campus for these events should go to the Wednesday meeting or contact John Hutton, 317 Craige Dormitory. Group collects reusable paper A public interest group in the Research Triangle area has announced the formation of a "paper pool" to provide reusable typing and mimeograph paper for the group. Peter Burke, an English graduate student and spokesman for the group, said the clean side of used paper will be used in the group's office. Plans may also be made to recycle paper, he said. Six UNC departments and offices have agreed to collect reusable paper, Burke said. He said members of the paper recycling committee will contact other departments and offices to establish boxes in central locations for the collection of the paper. The paper will be collected weekly on Fridays. Burke urged secretaries and other interested persons to cooperate in the project. 2nd lecture set in science series Dr. Jonathan Beckwith, who received worldwide publicity last year for the first reported isolation of a "eer.e," will prefer.! the ;cr.i lecture ir. the University Schorl cf Medicine's 11 Medical Science Lecture Senrs a: -i p.m. m the Cur.ic Audit onun. Beckwith. chairman of the 3 a c i e n c I c 2 y Department, Harvard Medical School, will discuss 'Gere Expression and Regulation In Vitro." Next week. Dr.Char!es C. Richardscn. professor cf biological chemistry- at Harvard Medical School, wdl present "Enzymatic Mechanism m DNA Replication." The 1971 lecture series deals with the most recent findings about how cells control the thousands cf chemical reactions that must occur to keep the cells alive and active. Education school receives grant Dean Norton L. Beach of the UNC School of Education has announced the receipt of a $2,500 grant from the N.C. Easter Seal Society for Crippled Children and Adults. The grant provides funds for equipment, research materials and training in the Rehabilitation Counseling Program of the School of Education. Graduate students will be able to use the new equipment and books in counseling in the program's new Rehabilitation Education and Research Unit. This unit provides for a materials center and seminar rooms for instruction. Other sponsors of the unit include the N.C. Vocational Rehabilitation Division of the Department of Public Instruction, the Rehabilitation Services Section of the N.C. Commission for the Blind, and the Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Department of the School of Medicine. Esquire quotes former student Esquire Magazine devotes part of an article in its October issue to the story of Lee Meyrowitz, a former Vietnam veteran and recent UNC graduate. Meyrowitz tells of the killing of an apparently innocent man in Vietnam, in the article, entitled "Lieutenant Calley's Army." The article includes the testimony of seven former soldiers who tortured prisoners and killed civilians during the war. Its subtitle is "Following Orders In Vietnam." Meyrowitz, a native of New Jersey, NOW IN STOCK AT VICKERS AUDIO AN-180 The AN-180 has separate record and playback circuit, low-impedance microphone preamplifiers are built in, two large Vu meters. A built in 400-HZ Oscillator is used to record a Dolby-level tone on the tape. Switchable multiplex filter. Output controls for both channels. Frequency response of 20 - 15,000 HZ 0.5 db. Stereo separation of at least 55 db. Signal to noise ratio is 65 db or better. OTHER TEAC DOLBY UNITS FROM 52.00 UP mtmM mm joined the Ar. :n lS-t at the are of 15 and was assigned to Vietnam m Ju':. 16. The article q-ctes him cv.-.g :h.s account of an incident arcund Tuy Hoa: "We were m a plain, on a h.I. Our sc-arrent spotted a man. I c-.'t sa VC. and in black pau mas. He tcld us he as a VC. and in some insane moment we ran after the man. did not attempt to capture hum and shot and killed him and called him in as a Kiy count." Meyrcwit: enrolled at Temple University ir. P6T and did net discuss what had hirper.e J m the war. He became a "r.ght-wi-g reactionarv" after attacks from radicals, he said. He transferred to UNC and continued his silence about the war. He slowly began changing his position and. with the killings at Kent State, became an active protestor against Vietnam. "Veterans may possibly be the revolutionary element of change m the United States,' Meyrowitz said m the article. "The seeds of discontent reside within our psyches." Meyrowitz helped organize the Vietnam Veterans Against the War en the UNC campus. He graduated m political science. Social workers slate meeting More than 1,000 social workers are expected to attend the annual conference of N.C. social workers Friday and Saturday at the Durham Hotel and Motel. Survival of social work and services in these "uncertain times" and under today's pressures will be the central theme of the conference. John Ollis, president of the N.C. Council of Social Work Chapters, a social work supervisor for Blue Ridge Mental Health Center, Asheville, said: "Today, more than ever, the social work profession must examine the way we try to help persons in need. The social problems of the 1970s have made us stop and think. What are we doing? Where are we going? These are the questions we will examine in our conference." The keynote address will be delivered by Dr. S.W. Byuarm, professor of sociology at Johnson C. Smith University, Charlotte, on Friday morning Oct. 8. His topic, "You, Your Agency and Services," questions the adequacy of the social services presently available to North Carolina's residents. Miss Heaton M. Crook, chairman of the U.S. Civil Defense Council, will speak on the importance of "State and National Planning to Meet Disasters." Glen Allison of Washington, D.C., representing the National Association of Sc-.il Workers, will clo-v the conference Oct. . with a d:cus'.cn of Natic- ii Social "welfare priorities and Aha r-u: services. A ser.es of workshop id h outstanding social welfare expert from North Carolina wul also be featured 1: the conference UNC prof works on price freeze A UNC economics p:ofeor has ber. named special assistant to Undervcretarv of Treasury Charles Vtj'Aer to work w::h both the wage-pnee freeze and the Nixon administration's revenue $hang plan. Frofesor Robert P. Strauss has beer. - of the technical evaluation : itive revenue hanr.c formula s;r .c late Mav. Dur.r.g the wage-prue free.v. Strauss has been working with t'-.e exemptions and exceptions group of the Office of Fmergencv Freparednex r review exemption requests bv firms ad associations. He represented the Treas-rv department at the recent Coc:r.o:v' Conference m San Juan. Puerto Ruo. ar.l spoke Sept. 27 for the department at the National Tax Association Meettmj: m Kansas City, Mo Strauss began his association with the Treasury, department as a Brookings Fconomic Policy fellow assigned to w.rk with revenue sharing. He was o-e ot II economists from throughout the cour.tr, to be awarded the Brookings fellow ships last year. Math dept creates position Dr. W. Robert Mann has K-t n appointed to the newly established oUue of associate chairman of the I Ac" Department of Mathematics The office was created to ftirut!.n n association with that of Dr. I red H. Wnght, chairman of the depart men!, which has had a 10 percent increase 1:1 registrations in mathematics this tall. Mann, a native of Honea Path. SC. graduated from the University f Rochester and received his Ph.D. degree at the University of California. He joined the UNC mathematics faculty in I'M'). In addition to his new responsibilities, he is serving as chairman f undergraduate studies in mathematics. On the graduate level most of his te.iching has been in the area of applied mathematics. The University honored Professor Mann in 1967 with the Tanner Award for Excellence in Teaching. LAST WEEK'S WINNER: 3 Wav Tie Barry Taylor 404 Ehringhaus UNC, Chapel Hill Ruth Durham 1812 Rolling Road Chapel Hill. N.C. Laura Hardman 622 Granville East . TUriV-sW UNC, Chapel Hill ACC ACTIO!! FROM THE HUB tlothing to bey, lost deposit competed eatry blank ot the Hob store closest to you: HUB OF CHAPEL HILL, 103 E. Franklin St. HUB OF DURHAM, Lakewoed Shopping Center HUB WAREHOUSE, Eastgate Stepping Center, C.H. 103 EAST, 103 E. Franklin St. (upstairs) CONTEST RULES 1. I ill out. completely offuul entry blank from The Djl! Ijt Heel, including your name, address, and telephone number. u!e f)rh official entry blanks h he accepted. Repro Jji ww.Vs he disqualified. 2. Deposit only one entry per vjore. An thing else will be automatically disqualified. 3. The Tie Breaker H.ore determine the winner, among tho guessing the highest number of correct thoues. The person who tomes closest to the actual v.ore ms the $25 gift ccrtifuat. 4 Gift certificate valid at an Hub store. ENTRY BLANK Deposit at any Hub store by Saturday, 12 noon pick the winner of these ACC games. (Circle your choices) N.C. State vs. Wake Forest North Carolina vs. Tulane South Carolina vs. Virginia Duke vs. Clemson Oyster Bowl, Norfolk Maryland vs. Syracuse 'Tie Breaker" Guess the actual score: Ti 1 1 I Name North Carolina Tulane Address Telephone 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 6, 1971, edition 1
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