Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 16, 1971, edition 1 / Page 2
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Saturday, October 16. 1971 nsntirrm '".v.". News around campus A H o o o 71 O O atomic iirai oi&av recoras The Daily Tar Heel SMiTi (Sail Jii A professional audit firm has found Student Government (SG) financial reports to be "in conformity with accepted accounting principles,'' SG officials said Thursday. "They reported that nothing is wrong," said Robert Grady, chairman of Student Legislature's Finance Committee. "That's the nicest thing n auditor can say. That's the highest clearance." Student Body Treasurer Donnie Dale said the report was good evidence that last spring's charges of mishandling student fees were unfounded. "There was no mismanagement," he said. SG contracted Touche Ross k Co. to conduct the audit - the first of student funds here in 15 years - at the suggestion of the Student Audit Board after handling of fees was questioned last spring. Grady and Dale said they think a professional audit of SG records nr-y not be necessary each year since the audit reported no discrepancies. Sex counseling begins Monday A human sexuality information and counseling service will open Monday on campus. The service will be available in Suite C of the Student Union from 2 to 5 p.m. and from 7 to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday, according to" Robert Wilson, co-chairman of the Human Sexuality Committee. The committee is sponsoring the service. Wilson said the service will provide accurate information on various aspects of sexuality, refer students who desire help to the various services in the University dealing with sexuality and provide counseling in sexuality and interpersonal relationships. The actual counseling work will be done by a staff of 20 volunteers. The Student Health Service and the Switchboard counceling service trained the volunteers for the service. Information and materials will also be available at the counseling office. The counseling service phone number is c)33-5055. Student named to drug panel Larry Larson, a freshman Morehead scholar, said Friday he is trying to represent youth and their viewpoints as Gov. Bob Scott's first youth member of the N.C. Drug Authority. Larson said his appointment is "a chance to use the contacts of the committee to learn about the workings of the state system of of government." Prescriptions Accurately " Filled Lenses Duplicated Headquarters For Quality Sunglasses Contact Lenses Fitted Contact Lens Accessories tctaus John and Lib Southern 121 E. Franklin St Between Varsity Theatre and Intimate m REfIT-A-CAR CEOWELL LITTLE MOTOR CO. CHAPEL HILL, 1710 E. Franklin St (No. 79 on Map) Chopel Hill 942-3143 (Dealer No. 0118851 Dial Durham 544-3711 BREAKFAST NOW BEING SERVED 7 a.m. to 1 1 a.m. BEST BREAKFAST IN TOWN! Sf Jr sap CT 104 S. btes Dr. 929-1230 The committee will have an organizational meeting Wednesday. Larson said the purpose cf the committee will be to make suggestions for drug legislation and to serve as an advisory board on drug issues. The "knowledge and quality of the men on the committee will insure its success," he said. Larson was valedictorian of his class at Sanderson High in Raleigh and he was a member of the National Honor Society. He received the Outstanding Senior Award from the Raleigh Chamber of Commerce. Perl appointed Physiology head Dr. Edward R. Perl has been named to succeed Dr. Augustus T. Miller as chairman of the Department of Physiology. Formerly of the University of Utah, Perl has also held appointments in physiology- at the University of Illinois, John Hopkins School of Medicine, Walter Reed Army Medical Center and the State University of New York College of Medicine at Syracuse. He has held two visiting professorships in France and was president of the Society for Neuroscience in 1969-70. Union sponsors learning groups A series of encounter groups, sponsored by the Carolina Union, will be offered to students beginning next week. The program is designed for persons who feel they a-3 functioning well in their day-to-day hv and would like to further their personal growth. Encounter groups are learning communities, providing each participant the opportunity to know himself and his feelings better and to understand how those feelings affect his behavior. Other objectives of the program are for each participant to learn through honest feedback how his behavior makes other people feel toward him; to become more comfortable in expressing his own feelings; and to develop a greater ability to listen, to understand and to be empathic with people. Supervised by a qualified group facilitator, the sessions involve a group of eight to 10 people in 10 90-minute sessions. The same group of persons meet together for the entire 10 sessions over a five-week period. This semester, there will be three groups, which will meet at 1 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays; 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays and 2 p.m. Mondays and Thursdays. The most Meaningful Semester you'll ever spend... could be the one on World Campus Afloat Sailing Feb. 1972 to Africa and the Orient Through a transfer format, more than 5,000 students from 450 campuses have participated for a semester in this unique program in inter national education. VVCA will broaden your horizons, literacy and figuratively ... and g ve you a tetter chance to make it meaningfully n this changing world. You'll study at sea with an experienced cos mopolitan faculty, and then djnrg port steps you'll study the world itself. You'll d sccver that no matter hew foreign and far-aAjy. you have a let m common with people of ether lands. tVCA isn't as expensive as you might think; we've done our best to bring it withn reach cf most college students. Write today for free details. TEACHERS: Summer travel with credit for teach ers and administrators. )! 3 Write Today to: - ' - r i. .it Box CC26. Orange. California 92666 FALL SPECIAL RENT A PINTO FOR $4 a day plus mileage REAL HASH BROWNS PANCAKES GREAT GRITS EGGS BREAKFAST MEATS :av s;; tion desk. The: UiSC prof gets research grant Dr. Louis S. Harris cf the UNC School of Medicine was named as one of the ex researchers by the Ford Foundation and New York City to search for a new and more effective non-addictive heroin substitute. Harris was named in the SI 00.000 Ford Grant and S2S4.00O New York City Grant, which were funded as six projects, each designed to improve the effectiveness of the "antagonist" drags cyclozocine and naloxone. Another UNC professor, Leonard Berlow, director of Drug Abuse education of the UNC School of Pharmacy, has been named to the Advisory Committee of the Southern Regional Education Board in Atlanta. A member of the 10-man board, Berlow will help to advise the group in the education of its 14-member southern states in the abuse cf drugs. In experimenting with the new drugs created for the purpose of alleviating dependence on heroin, Harris explained, "Unlike methadone, which blocks the craving for heroin but is an addictive drug itself, cyclozocine and naloxone are not addictive." Cyclozocine and naloxone do not squelch the desire for heroin, Harris said, but they do block out the euphoric feeling that is associated with heroin and thus could eventually discourage the use of it. Drug users may be able to be deconditioned by the use of these drugs when they feel no effect from heroin, and after the "deconditioning" the antagonist drugs can also be discontinued. According the the UNC scientist, a pioneer in drug research, each researcher in the project will look for ways to modify the chemical structure of the two antagonist drugs in ways that will prolong their action in the body. Indian festival begins Monday While Monday is just "another day" in the U.S., it marks the beginning of Deepavali in India, one of the three major Hindu festivals of the country. Deepavali (called Divali, for short) comes annually during the second half of October and the first half of November. Deepavali literally means "a row of lights" and such illumination is the major feature of the festival. Earthern pots filled with oil are lighted in the evenings and set up in extended in rows both inside and outside the houses and public buildings. Firework displays also form a vital part of the five-day celebration. Interested students rr Student Union inform will be a charze of 55. It¬ just the same old steak Dial 967-5727 LiL.1 JORDANS LE eHHROUUS I EZZ3 I IS7 E. hMiiry Stmt Ckopol Hill d Puzzle 3 Female ruff 4 Hits lightly 5 Cut in slivers 6 More acid 7 Unadulterated 8 Employ 9 Football position (abbr.) 10 Sea nymph 11 Inexpensive 13 Leases 16 Timid 19 Send forth 21 Spool 23 Choice part 25 Twirls 27 Central American tree 29 Fruit drink 32 Declare 33 Sums ACROSS 1 Fortified places 6 Reject 11 Breakfast food 12 Expulsion 14 Height (attr.) 15 Fastidious diner 17 Note cf scale IS French for "summer'' 20 Ta'ly 21 Unit cf Japanese currency 22 Egyptian sirginj girl 24 Organ cf sigwt 25 Part cf fireplace 25 Tolled 23 Swiftly flowing part of stream 30 Penpcir.t 31 Noise 32 Stationary part cf motor 35 Fixer 33 Carry 39 Southwestern Indian 41 Kill 42 Devoured 43 Soap plant 45 The self 45 Symbol for tanta'um 47 Darted 49 Army officer (afcbr.) 0 Chck beetle 52 Encomiums 54 Heavenly bo 55 Unit of fece (p DO.NN 1 Physical condition 2 Conjunction t 3 n t character.zir.g the resiivii :s garr.r.ir.g with &ea shells. The r.ris-e crrr.ir.g from gambling dens is a:rr.ed a attention cf Laxrr.:. tracer :h; wea Gamble, is officially banned :n Ir.da. s-d t:ev-rs o: these 'urerstitier.s nave to indulge :n such acts secretly. Divl marks the onset of the w-r.te: season, and farmers consider it to be a fertility festival. Divau is also the time for brother-scster reunions. It is believed that every male should dine in the hcu?e c: his sister or a female relative. This is to commemorate the occassicn when Vama-Dvitya. a Hindu mythological figure dined with his sister Yamuna and commanded everyone to do likewise. Divaii has its origins m Hindi mythology. Historically, the festival commemorates the return of the warrior Rama and his coronation after an exile of 14 years in the jungles. Other mythological stories connected with the festival are the reconciliation of Lord Shiva and his wife Parvati and the victory of Vishnu over the demon king. Bali. Corsage sale begins Monday "Mum's the Word" will be the theme of this year's Homecoming mum sale, being held Monday through Wednesday, Senior Class President Lee Hood Capps announced Thursday. The price of the corsages will be S2. Students may purchase them from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at residence colleges, Y-Court, Chase Cafeteria, the Student Union and the Undergraduate Library. Proceeds from the sale, sponsored annually by the senior class, will go into the Molly Nicholson Memorial Scholarship, Capps said. Financial Aid Director William Geer called this one of the most fluid and free scholarships available through the University," Capps said. Students who buy a corsage will be given a ticket which they will present at one of 10 distribution centers Oct. 23. The distribution point will be stamped on the ticket and will be open from 8:45 to 1 1 a.m. on Homecoming Day. Mums will be distributed from 8:45 a.m. on the day of the game at Finley Golf Course, the Scuttlebutt and the Carolina Inn and from 10:30 a.m. at the Morehead Building. The flowers will be on sale at the four gates of Kenan Stadium from 1 1 :30 a.m. until game time. "In an age of declining traditions, this is one of the only ones remaining on campus," Capps said. "If we sell 5,000 mums, the senior class can net S3, 700 for the scholarship fund." Capps explained the scholarship, created by the class of '68, is awarded annually to a student whose financial situation would otherwise keep him from attending the University. (2L ( 215 878-5800 Woman i Mtdcal Assistance Answer to Yesterday's Puzz'e S'O iP 5T;RAiP Vil ;E L OlTiT'Q I ILlK C iRJE T5 QL'A Oiu 'E IE aH",KiE L1SJT1A.TI .O N;5 S po V ;E NiO i T m!aik'e is O S I H ' A C AlRIE ECjMA;KnsDS RE DClAjGiE rtTJAlP 14? E SICIU1UE MITLJS A L IT E t jpTl Uo S IE Qgj A ft "lS hA TjpQmiaJ El em; mieT RIDS E IO IM Ptl IE it 34 Reports 35 Liquefied 36 King cf birds (Pi) 37 Hindu peasants 40 Also 43 Genus cf rr.ap'es 44 S!ippery 47 Music, as written 45 Man s nickname 51 Near 53 Earth goddess A " O t - I, , n ii -ii n nir i 1 12 13 14 15 fe-AO 7 13 9 ilO ly' W .&i ii JW """jgi2' 22 23" 524 ;m23" -A- .'.v X . I 1 mmm. k 1 1 , - ,an mii - i m m mA 32 33 34 VX135 36 37 33 Ty 39 0 v:jl i n 1 tit .'.S . i r 50 51 yy.52 IF li53 V LA Godwin won't fi aturday RALEIGH - Hu Speaker Phil Gcd.r. Friday s:d he rt opr- ' have the u?ccm:r. spe-iaJ lecslativ; sess;cn .:ch the r---- f'-?ct;-,n Tuesy back to a traditional Safrday vote. ButGo1n told newsmen he is against efforts to have the October r?c.y. session take up the issue of permitting absentee ballots m the primary. i wouldn't have any objections in just repealing the l'l act and putting i: back on Saturday ," said Godwin. -As presiding officer. I have a fea: of opening the door to other bills, but i: it's a simple matter of repealing. I wouldn't have any objections." he said. State Senator Phil Kirk t R-Rowan said however that he favors the drive to prov-.d: for absentee ballots, and feels Republicans will make a major campaign iue of tb? ballot controversy unless the law is changed at this month's special seston. Kirk urged that the right to absentee ballots in next year's primary be extended :. students, truck drivers, salesmen and others who will have to be away from the.: permanent residences. "It is hypocritical to eve young people the right to vote and then set the prim.ir dav when it will be virtually impossible for them to cast their ballots." said Kirk The General Assembly of P"! switched the day of the pnmarv from Saturdav r Tuesday. Textile duty dropped TOKYO - The United States exempted Japanese textiles from the 10 percent surcharge on imports Friday in exchange for an agreement by Japan to limit its t S sales to woolen and synthetic materials. A similar agreement was signed later in the day with Hong Kong and South Korea. Textile executives in North Carolina, where more than 50 plants have closed m the past year and a half, were generally pleased but very restrained Friday m reacting news of the United States - Japanese agreement to limit textile shipments. Several refused comment and many said the effect of the limitations will depcr..: greatly on just how much protection the controls will give specific segments o! the industry. Leonard Morenz of Carolina Mills at Maiden. President of the North Carolm Textile Manufacturers Association, said "i am grateful to the President for follow me. through on it." But, he said that overall Limits on the increase of textile imports would be '"rather meaningless" unless the bargain effectively stopped the Japanese from "concentratir c shipments of one given product into the country and destroying that market." The agreement placed an overall growth limit of five percent on Japanese exp :u for the next three years. It established two major classes of man-made textiles, with further limits on the various categories. Medina discharged FT. McPHERSON, Ga. - Captain Lrnest L. Medina, who resigned from the r:n. following his acquital on charges of presiding over a massacre at My Lai, w.i honorably discharged today and left saying he had "no animosity and n hr '. feelings." The 35-year-old Medina, dressed in army tans and accompanied by his two militar. attorneys, entered the personnel building at Ft. McPherson promptly at 10:00 a.m. !! emerged 10 minutes later, smiling and dressed in a brown civilian suit. Asked how he felt, he jokingly shot back: '"Like a civilian." In addition to his discharge papers, Medina, of Montrose, Colorado, was, as a nutter of routine, handed certificates of appreciation from President Nixon and Army ('!:.: of Staff William C. Westmoreland. .Nixon lauds Graham CHARLOTTE President Nixon, Graham, Friday called for a renewal of character that America had when it was young." Nixon, in a speech highlighting "Billy Graham Day" in the evangelist said the nation needs a strong religious faith to "meet the challenge peace and freedom in the world." The president flew to Charlotte Friday afternoon to unveil a plaque placed at the site where Graham was born. Nixon praised Graham as "The top evangelist, the top preacher in the Graham, who spoke before the president, began his remarks by gett of one-liners which brought cheers from the crowd of 12 000 at Coliseum. Graham said when he was a boy he lived in poverty, "Except, we did n were poor. We did not have sociologists, educators, and newscasters reminding us of how poor we were. "We also had the problem of rats. The only difference between then and now is we did not call upon the to kill them. We killed our own," Graham said. R eagan visits Thieu SAIGON - U.S. Presidential en Ronald Reagan congratulated South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu tod3y on winning a one man election and said George Washington was also elected without opposition. The California governor told a news conference before leaving for Seoul, South Korea, he also brought Thieu a message from President Nixon saying there would be "no change in the course or policy of our nation" toward South V".'." "''"""'"".""... '" Wanted: Experienced guttar player. Single, willing to travel, for roc group. Must te able to smg lead. Contact Dewitt or Jack m Love Valley. N.C. (704) 592-7351. NEED TICKETS TO UNC vs. W.F. on Oct. 23. will pay good price for at least 2 together. Can Bern 967-2053, after 6 p.m. INTERNATIONAL JOBS Europe, South America. Asia. Australia. USA, Openings in all fields. Social Sciences, Business, Sciences. Engineering, Education, etc. Alaska construction and pipeline work. Earnings to $500 weekly. Summer or permanent. Paid expenses, bonuses, travel. Complete current information Only $3. Moner Pack guarantee. Apply early for best opportunities write now!!! International Employment. Bex 721 N662. Peaoody, Massachusetts 01960 (Not an employment agency) FOR SALE: New 10 speed boy's bike. CaM 942-8058. YE OLDE BOOK SALE Today only. 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. wesJey Foundation, 214 Pittsboro St. Used boots, hard-cover, paperback, hgh variety, low, low prices. Teacher needs apartment, wants to snare 2 bedrm. with 1 other female upperclassman, grad student, or professional. Call 942-7682. C Sfilt primary paying tribute to his friend. I v "the religious faith, morality the Vietnam. Regan, touring Ac.;a as emissary, said he gave Thieu "congratulations" on winning the referendum." Reagan said he "couldn't un. the uproar" about Thieu's un. October 3 election especially sin elections are standard in Comma: and underdeveloped countries. He don't believe there was an opps our first president." Nikkormat FTN with 50mm len-.. rj-2 ' S350 value. Must sell S300. 1970 BSA a: Victor, good condition, needs new i;it. sc cable. 625. Call 967-7252. 1964 VW Convertible, engin rebuilt $400. Can 942-7851. FOR SALE: 1966 Mustang low m. lease. qz3 shape, new parts. 12 guage F& Shotgun. Need money for tuition. 942-5S23 nights, or Carrboro 66 daytime. Female wanted to assume lease m Ca- -S'uth. Call 29-7474. ask about room 2833. DATING SERVICE: Meet more me the Opposite sex in Chapel h.u. Fttt ibers fhjl r I i-i,il C. wr.te: box 77346. Atlanta. Ga. 30309. $$$ NEED EXTRA CASH $$$ Part t.me w-' available. Week nShts or weekend days a-1 nxjms at Roy Rogers. Apply ,r person a':' 3 P.m. NEEDED: Female Roommate attendant by wheelchair graduate student. Most housekeeping duties, no lifting Pay $1C0 p' mo. Call Craige Hail Office for appomtme-:. 933-2285. ROOMMATE WANTED: K.ng's Arms Apt. $50 & utilit.es. shag carpet. 3 mi. from campus, good vibes. 96 7-2544. assifieds
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 16, 1971, edition 1
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