Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 11, 1971, edition 1 / Page 4
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The Daily Tar Heel Monday. October 11, 1971 activities calendar if and 101111 d. iCampii AIESEC JOBS ABROAD program wit! meet n the Union "lhurvday at 7:30 p.m. Check tne schedule at the information aes lor tr,e room number, the meeting Is open to anyone. The Association of Women Students (AS) will meet at 6:45 p.m. tonight in tne Frank Porter Graham Lounge of the Union. Committees will be reorganized and A S projects including aid tor area da care centers and the circulation of a nes;e?!er will be discussed. There will be a meeting Readers on Tuesday at 4 p.m Everyone Is Invited to attend. of the Carolina in 103 e' S i" . Open auditions for a one-r-ojr television version of "Dial M" for murder" will be held Wednesday in Swain Mall from 2-4 p.m. and from 7-10 p.m. Scripts are available in Poom 215-A, Swain HaH from David Go". Cad 967-4567 for more information. The Carolina agamit Tuition-Undergraduate Committee will meet tonight at 7 o'ciocf in the Union. Anyone interested but unable to attend should contact Alice Palor, 933-8024. Anyone interested in painting the graffitti cube for University Day shou'd contact the special projects committee in Su'te A of the Union, or call Pam Campbell. 9331157. N.C. PIPG (Nader-style group) will hold a meeting tonight at 7:30 in Murphey Hall for all persons interested in working on fy committee. A canvassing meeting for graduate students will be held at 7:30 in room 213-215 of the Student Union. Bicycles for the U'wersty Day bicycle parade may be registered today at the u-dergrad-ate library. V -court, the Scuttsebutt or the Union information des. The Christ. am Science Co ege Organization will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Wesley Foundation library. Everyone is welcome to attend. There win be a meetng of t Vojng Democrats Ci-b Tuesday at 7 p.m. in tne Union. All mteres'ed students are urged to attend. More tutors are need for the YM-YWCA's after-school study center for elementary school children. The program involves working witn one or two children two afternoons a wee. appro imately 2 j hours. For -'e information, see Jean uer at the V. Teacher Placement Bureau interviews win be held today in Room 103 Peabody for the Winston-satemForsyth County Schools. S'eve Sloan, Council on Environmental Quality, will speak on "Environmental Impact of Water Projects" at 1 p.m. today at the water resources seminar, Poom 101. School of Public Health. Remember him or her with STUDIO CARDS The r.jrs "j research ccHoautu-n win Heid in Room 10-4. Carrington Mail at 1 pm. today. Mr$. Judith K. Coan. pharmacy resident n N.C. Memorial and grad Student in phar-.cy, ,.! tpeak on 'vedcation Prcbiems in E-e'jency Room Users Ep-de iO'og Study in N.C. Me oriai i-csc-tal." The 'res a" soccer team will piay : -ga e CoHege today at 3 p.m. on Fet:tr F.ed. The cd putaticn center ihcrt cc-rs wui be neid m Poom, 22S. P-i'S.ps, t: da,. T"- toe w.h be "Ad.anced PL1." Te computer science C0l'-O3- i-m wit held today at 3:15 p.m. in Poom 233, P.ri ps. Pa-l Katanak, Saan-an River Laboratory of DuPont. win spea- on "The Role of Simulation m a Computer Performance Analysis." The environmental science and engineering seminar will be held in Room 228, School cf Public Heaith today at 4 p.m. Harney Jeffries of UNC wilt speak on "An Experimental Method for Mearmg tne Rates of Synhess, Destruction and Transport of Ozone In the lower Atmosphere." The population center lecture-discussion series win be held tonight at 7:30 p.m. in tne westey Foundation. The topic will be "Can the Population Problem be Solved by a Redistribution of People?" Person wishing to help distribute birthday u nTse x "ha ir I cae. scM d-ms, a-2 ?cys for t- u-fvty grand birthday pa'ty snouis cctKt Pa Ca 't6n, 957-4135; D S-ite A of U-c--. 533-1157. in back room of Carolina j Barber Shop ! Appointments HORSE RIDING: Efn,c" i-trested in ca p"S r'P Oct. 16 iJ 17 p ease attend a metfg Tuevday at S p.m. m tne Union. A $2 deposit pl.s $.50 s fee win be co' -ected. Anyone interested but u-ab-e to attend t-e meeting scouts caa Crrstne i-r at 323-335S today. The Ca pus Series cf Debate hi eet at S p.m. t r n .g-1 n the U.en. The topc will t-e. "Revolved. The U.S.A. is g-uiity cf war cn es in Suut-east Asia." Everyone ,s t r attend. DRAFT COUNSELING: Wed-esJa, . 3-5 p.m.; Monojy and Thursday, 3-5 P.m. 7-9 p.m. in Room 258, S-ite B, cf te J"c . Baha'i meetings every Monday at 8 p. . the Union, and every Tuesday at S p.m. at 213 Pure'uy Road. Everyone is welcome to co e by. "The American N.vei New," a treat e-t cf important American cvfs s -ce 1969. wii be cf'ered at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays be; -- n; October 12 and e"d ng No.e per 30. The course is a part of the UNC Ecte-s-r-n Division. All interested call 933-1124. Admission Test for Graduate Study in Business application forms may be ottai-ed m 019 Peabody. For Admission to the November test, forms must be received in Princeton, New Jersey, by October 15. The theoretical physics seminar will be held at 3 p.m. today in Room 265, Phiihps. Professor David G. Bouiware win speak on "The Mass of the Graviton." FOUND: Small black kitten in front of Chapel Kill, N. C. qg REMFA-CAR CHAPEL HILL, 1710 E. Franklin St. (No. 79 on Mop) Chapel Hill 942-3143 (Dealer No. 011885) Dial Durham 544-3711 HONEY'S An All You Can Eat Spagetti Special includes Salad, Bread, Iced Tea or Coffee, only 39 Everyday Special All Day Short Stack of Pancakes with syrup, butter and coffee 5J 39 New Hours 7 a.m. 10 p.m. Sun. Thurs. rr : o - : -i : rn. oql. a.m. ivituiuyiii Kill Will IILMIII ,,111111 Mill II IIIIIIIIHWni'llMUllMliUMM'HllWHI Illlllll Ill I S LUNCHEON SPECIAL $ I . - vI2i r W Join the Inn Crow d at C 2f3 WEST FRANKU St! 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. -Mon. thru Thurs. SL 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. - Fri. and Sat 4 p.m. to 11p.m. Sunday PONT FORGET ftrrCIHL ' Jl S October reg. 1.75 medium pizza ! J BONUS 11:30 2 P.M. ONLY COUPON j I FAVORABLE Q (C (J I FAMILY DINING f S Coll oheid (Limit 2 Per Coupon) THISG fTT j f for Foster Service rru ,DriM C I MED. SIZE PIZZAS ONLY COUPON C 1 YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE ON TAP Ji r Buy a Coke (large) and keep the glass A contemporary glass for Coca-Cola Collect your set of 6 or 8 AVAILABLE NOW AT F7? r !f nn r 337 W. Rostaary St. if 1 by HE iupr Of Time it BLMKT COhCCCT ceYnoiD; coiKeum N.C. STATE U. QCTQ9 8Pm TICKGTC hVIWLrf LCOCT 13 rlT UhiOn RCCORD MRS: DOOR In 4 UNIVERSITY OPTICIAN J. Paul Moore Reg. Licensed Don L. Register Opticians 968-8818 Prescriptions Filled Lenses Duplicated - Sunglasses Contact Lenses and Accessories VISIT OUR BEAUTIFUL LOCATION IN UNIVERSITY SQUARE Horttiwesttrn Mutuc! Ufs Ins. ES. FOUND: B'c -3 3;s. : 0-t LOST: G'T iCi"ty D - ; r ' VV 913-5 332. 15 SEA 0 FOUND: P.pcy Fr- Spt e 'tr 3D. 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REGARD LOST: I 1 A'u-"i Hji fvw f I J.I , r5i;. ch? par At Force t d S4j-Ki Ray-6aT. yi Kves. rera' f'ai-ei. C a : 933-f M2 or cc ct. 4S9-7I55 CAD LOST SOVtlMINU' CrK c f a . .c. tost and fcufd m &a t S Building o can at 933-3996. YOUR CHOICE $30 PER WEEIC PLUS MILEAGE CROWELL LITTLE MOTOR CO. iiii,iiiiiiiiiiMiMiaiiMiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiii,MMMMWwwi 'wW ' mmmmvmmm&rmmmwmmmmmmmummm ogers says expulsion of N. China 'dangerous' D WASHINGTON- Secretary of State William P. Rogers warned Sunday that expelling Nationalist China from the United Nations would set a "very dangerous precedent" which could be "detrimental to the future" of the world body, i His voice rising with emotion, Rogers said he could think of 10 other nations which might be expelled under such a precedent and added: "Let me say, that if the Republic of China is expelled, I can imagine that nations like Albania and others might claim that because of that action - expelling the Republic of China - that all the actions taken by the Security Council of the t'nitcd Nations since its beginning were illegal. "In other words, if the United Nations is going to take the position that after all these years in dealing with the Republic of China, that it would he expelled and thereby be an international outlaw and that its presence was never appropriate in the first place, I can imagine an attack on the United Nations that would be very serious indeed." ockers work 'grudgingly' SAN FRANCISCO Longshoremen passed tattered picket signs Sunday to "grudgingly" work the backlog of ships idled by the 100-day West Coast Dock Strike. Longshoremen from Los Angeles to Seattle Saturday began loading and unloading the 250 ships stacked in 24 West Coast ports under a back-to-work federal court order issued Wednesday. Some men were glad to be back on the job but were bitter about the circumstances. "We didn't gain anything," said one veteran who has worked the docks since 1944. "We're not making any more money. In 80 days well be back out." The federal court injunction ordered the men back to work under the old contract for 10 days and a hearing was set for October 15 on whether to grant a permanent injunction for the full 80 day "cooling off" period sought by President Nixon under the Taft-Hartley law. Agnew traveling again WASHINGTON - Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew left Sunday on an official overseas mission to Turkey, Iran, and Greece and a sentimental journey to his ancestral home. The 10-day trip is Agnew's fourth, making him one of the most widely traveled vice-presidents in the nation's history. Agnew journeyed twice to the Far East and this summer made a 32-day, 10-nation round-the-world trip. With one refueling stop in Spain, Agnew will fly directly to Ankara for a twrlay official visit to Turkey. Sadat flies to Kuwait MIDEAST - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat flew from Cairo to Kuwait Sunday on the first leg of a diplomatic mission which will be climaxed by talks in Moscow Soviet leaders on the crisis in the Middle East. Sadat's arrival in the oil rich Persian Gulf Sheikhdom for a one-day visit was reported by Kuwait radio. It said he was greeted at the airport by Kuwait's ruler, Sheikh Sabah as Saim as Sabah, and high ranking government officials. The Egyptian semi-official Middle East News Agency said Sadat and the Sheikh discussed the Arab-Israeli conflict and the situation in the Persian Gulf. ttica toll rises to 43 ROCHESTER, N.Y. - The toll of the Attica prison riot has risen to 43 with the death of Harrison Whalen, a 37 year-old guard who was held hostage by the rioters. Whalen died Saturday in Rochester's Strong Memorial Hospital. Eleven prison employes and 32 inmates lost their lives in the riot, the worst m thus century. Whalen W3S wounded September 13, when a force of state police, National Guard troops and sheriff's deputies stormed the prison. He was taken to St. Jerome's Hospital in Batavia, N.Y., suffering from gun-hot wounds in the neck, back, and abdomen, according to a hospital spokesman. Emperor ends tour GENEVA Emperor Hirohito of Japan neared the end of his European tour Sunday with a quiet day in neutral Switzerland which contrasted sharply with earlier hostile incidents elsewhere. Swiss authorities, at the specific request of the 70-year-old emperor, kept his 22-hour visit strictly private. Both in Geneva and near Lausanne, where Hirohito and the Empress Nagako, 68, went sightseeing and spent the night, police far outnumbered spectators. Switzerland was the next to last stop on Hirohito's seven-nation European tour. Departure for Bonn. last stop on their tour, was scheduled for early Monday. Series game cancelled BALTIMORE - Rain postponed the second game of the World Series Sunday. The game was called off by Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn about an hour and a half before the 2 p.m. starting time. Approximately two and a half inches of rain fell in the Baltimore area since early Saturday evening. The infield at Memorial Stadium was covered by a tarp but the outfield was left bare. Pat Santaroni, head groundskeeper, said he decided not to cover the outfield because recently resoded grass in short Ieftfield had knit. Sunday's game was postponed until 1 p.m. EDT Monday. As a result of the rainout the first travel date will be cancelled. The teams will meet Tuesday in Pittsburgh. A
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 11, 1971, edition 1
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