Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 20, 1971, edition 1 / Page 3
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Vednesdr. October 20. 197 1 The Duty Tar He-I 3 Neivs around campus tailings commends trustees Student Body President Joe Stalling commended Tuesday the L'NC Board of Trustees for placing Consolidated University student body presidents on '.tanding committees Monday. He disagreed with the trustees' decisions not to place a student on the F x e i u t iv e C o m m i 1 1 e e . "It was a move m the right direction to put students on the standing committees. " Stalling said Tuesday. Stalling. and N.C. State University Student Body President Gus Gusler were placed on the Visiting Committee. Other student body presidents were placed on other standing committees. "But student representation should -:i -o be on the hxecutive Committee since ;'")St decisions concerning the ( onsolidjted University are made there.' Stalling added. The Executive Committee, composed oi 15 members of the 1 06-member Board of Trustees, makes many of the preliminary decisions concerning what the board will bring up for discussion. "I feci it is important to accept 'tudent input in fact as well as symbolically," Stalling said. He sujM-ested a student could be placed as an ex-officio member of the hxecutive Committee. "Student body presidents are not in office for as long as a regular trustee term," he explained. I he N.C. General Assembly will meet in special session Tuesday to decide the reorganization of higher education. "I realize there will be a new University structure coming out of the legislative action next week," Stallings said. "I hope there will be some provision lor student representation on the new structure." Liberal caucus forms at UNC An organizational meeting to form a liberal caucus for the upcoming Student Legislature elections will be at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Student Union, according to Legislators Alen Nagle and Gerry Cohen. Nagle said his and Cohen Ls idea of holding a convention in order to form a liberal party on campus is the first such attempt in several years. "We hope the meeting will facilitate communication among the liberally oriented people on campus." Nagle said. CampTiis Thcie will be a presentation of some i mm prints of silent comedy shorts in Greenlaw room ill tonight at 8 p.m. Included will be Ljutel and Hardy's "Leave Them Laughing" and Charlie Chaplin's "Easy Street" and "Shanrihaied." Admission is free to all. "The Selling of the Pentagon," the controversial CBS documentary, will be shown tonight at 8 and 9:15 p.m. in the Wesley foundation. Admission will be $.25. Senior Psychology Majors: There will be a meeting concerning job opportunities and graduate school applications tonight at 8 p.m. in 112 Davie Hall. Representatives from the Psychology Department and the Placement Office will discuss positions that might be available for psych majors, procedures for applying for these positions and opportunities for graduate training in psychology and in related fields. DRAFT COUNSELING: 7-9 p.m., Monday-Thursday; 3-5 p.m., Monday-Friday in Room 258, Suite 8, of the Union. Breaking Camp: a work-study group for women writers and artists to deal with shaping a non-sexist art and art world, first meeting Sunday at 1 p.m. Call 942-7738 for information. Dr. Gordon Burch, Duke psychologist, will be speak mq at 7:30 p.m. tonight on "Getting to Know Someone Else" in Dey Hall's 4th floor faculty Lounge. The meeting is sponsored by Carolina Christian Fellowship, and all interested students are invited. The Black Student Movement will sponsor a homecoming dance, featuring Acid Rock soul band. Friday at 8 p.m. in Great Hall. Miss BSM will be crowned. Tickets are available at the Union desk for $2 per couple or $1.50, stag. MOREHEAD COLLEGE RESIDENTS: Your Counseling Team (ask your Resident Advisor for details) now has a telephone in the Graham basement. Call 933-8158. Mon.-Thurs., 9-12 p.m. Theie will be an open meeting of the Student Mobilisation Committee today at 7 p.m. m Room 491, Greenlaw. 1 he physics colloquium will be held today at 4 p.m. in Room 215, Phillips. Dr. Seymour H. Mauskopf, University College, London, will speak on Scientific Interplay: The Interaction of Chemistry, Crystallography and Optics in the Fust Half of the Nineteenth Century." The UNC chapter of A.F.S. will meet ti-nioht at 7:30 p.m. in Room 205. Dey Hall. AH American Field Service returnees and other interested persons are invited. Cjid section practice tor Carolina-Wake f- orest game will be held in Kenan Stadium Thursday at 4 p.m. Come to the student gate tor admission. Tickets are on a first come-first sei vedbasis. ID'S, athletic passes and date tickets are required. See today's DTH for exact details. Women's Health and Problem Pregnancy Counseling Service. Confidential, free service providing counseling and information concerning contraceptives, problem pregnancies and women's health. Call Switchboard 929 7 1 77. UNC Sailing Club will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. m trie Union. Check Union schedule for room number . Important tutor workshop today for all tutors m the YM-YWCA tutorial proiect. Carolina Union. 4-5 p.m. The N.C. Symposium on Highway Safety will be field Thursday and Friday in the 4th Moor Faculty Lounge, Dey Hall, beginning at 9 a.m. The topic is "The Young Driver: Reckless oi Unprepared'" All UNC faculty and students are invited to attend. "Anyone of Lberal persuasion interested in running during the fall election should attend the meeting. "By organizing a party and forming a coalition of Interests, we hope to come up with a substantive program and not merely something amorphous." The meeting is open to anyone interested in running for legislature. 'There is the possibility of a huge turnover in legislature this fall," Nagle said. "Thirty seats, which is half of those in the legislature, are now open." Fall elections will be held Nov. 9. The deadline for filing party nominations to run for legislature is Wednesday midnight. Visit to U.N. planned by The YM-YWCA International Affairs Committee announced Tuesday tentative plans for a trip to the United Nations around the end of semester break in January. All interested students are invited to participate in the trip, which will last from four to six days. Bus travel and midtown lodging at reasonable cost, a program of several days at the UN building and free time for shopping and the theatre have been tentatively scheduled. Committee members expressed their concern at the generally uninformed view of the UN held by the average University student. They said four program topics are presently open to the group: China in the UN, the problems of South Africa, the UN and the environment and the problems of developing nations. One of these topics will be selected shortly to be the basis of a series of on-campus briefings, discussions and meetings to provide background information for the trip. The first announcement of the UNC project coincides with the celebration of United Nations Day, Oct. 24. Ga. debaters win tourney University of Georgia debaters defeated William and Mary University last weekend to win the Tar Heel Invitational Debate Tournament. activities The YM-YWCA Big Brother-Big Sister program will hold its second organizational meeting today at 8 p.m. in the Union. Call Fred Irons, 968-9068, or Dale Hamrick, 967-2421, for more information. "In the Company of Men" will be shown Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Coffee House. Discussion and refreshments will follow the film, sponsored by the Current Affairs Committee. Peace Corps and VISTA recruiters are on campus in the Y-Court and Carolina Union. A film will be shown tonight at 7 p.m. in Abernathy Hall, Room 102. Anyone interested in working with, manning tables for, or hewing sponsor a state-wide Amnesty Petition with the North Carolina Veterans for Peace may sign up in the YM-YWCA office. State Affairs Committee meeting tonight at 9 p.m. Check Union desk for room. Nomination forms for the Order of the Valkyries, highest campus honorary for women, are now available at the Union desk. Outstanding junior and senior women are eligible for nomination. Forms must be returned to the desk or mailed to Box no. 32, Carolina Union, by Oct. 22. FOUND: Orange bike in bushes by Avery. Check by Avery. LOST: Green leather key case, initials MAH, lost anywhere on campus, at Honey's or Duke Gardens parking lot. Call 933-8152 after 6 p.m. Reward. LOST: Brown alligator-grained tri-fold wallet in vicinity of 2nd floor lounge, Granville South. Return to E. Wilson Cuningham, 211 Lewis, or call 933-1543. TIJUANA FATS SPECIALS Two free drafts with any dinner on Tues.. Wed., & Thurs. SERVING GREAT MEXICAN FOOD BRING THIS COUPON (ONE PER CUSTOMER) 5-9 Mon-Thurs 403 VV. Rosemary ANOTHER FAT SPECIAL Lunch 11:30-2:30 Mon-Fn SI 49 Taco Enchallida Rice Retried Beans Coke. Tea. CoHee m The Georca team. R: chard Bethea and Margaret Snyder, arguing the negate, took a 6-1 decision m the cse cr. plang minority percentages or. ;unes. Two' UNC debate teams. Cc.e Campbell and Key Kernel ar.d Hi:: Id and Harvey Kennedy, were eliminated :n the Owto-fmah. This year's tournament was larg: last vear's. with 66 teams :r:. schools. John Saxon, a member :: the University of Alabama team, coached by former UNC debate coach CV.Iy CLrk. was named first speaker. The Tar Heels will travel t? the University of Georgia in Athens O.t. 2 to compete in the Amen.an Classic Invitational Debates (ACIDi Or.: the top U.S. teams are invited t: th debate, "the ACID test." The ACID test is a v. arm-up for the Peachtree Debate Tournament at Lmory University. one of the largest tournaments. This debate is the first national qualifying tournament for Joe Loveland and Joe McGuire th:s ear. A win will insure a bid to the National Invitational Debate. Loveland and McGuire won the Peachtree Debates last year. John Kerry talk slated at UNC-G Decorated Vietnam veteran John Kerry will speak Oct. 25 on the role of the veteran in American life at UNC-G. The Veterans' Day address, open to the public, is scheduled for 8:15 p.m. in Aycock Auditorium. Robert Priscoll, spokesman for the sponsoring N.C. Committee to Lnd the War in Indochina, said, "There is a deepening sense of patriotism among many veterans. "No one articulates this position better than John Kerry." he added. Kerry attained national recognition last spring after his testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He maintained many U.S. soldiers were ashamed to be involved in a civil war in which "most people didn't even know the difference between communism and democracy." A 1966 graduate of Yale University, Kerry has received three Purple Hearts, the Silver Star and the Bronze Star. calendar LOST: Brown leather wallet. Need ID'S. Call Janet, 933-5143. Reward. LOST: Men's black glasses. Call 929-7067. LOST: Small army side pack full of art supplies, left in Room 221, Greenlaw. Call 929-7067. LOST: Ladies' tortoise-shell prescription sunglasses near Harry's. Call 286-3755, Durham, collect. LOST: Black check book with name Dan R. Ellis on checks. Need ID'S, addresses and phone numbers. Send to P.O. Box 1011, or call 933-7298 (2-6 p.m.) or 967-6236 (6-8 p.m.). Reward. LOST: Red and black shawl. Call 477-1749, collect, in Durham. LOST: Aluminum-framed prescription sunglasses in black case. Call Paul B. Fulcher, 966-2302. LOST: Black wallet in Hector's on Sunday. Call 966-5498. LOST: Blue diaper bag in back of red Camaro after hitch-hiking on Highway 54 Thursday night. Call 942-3552 before 3:30 p.m. LOST: Red shawl left in van of Leo male with Gemini rising. Call Louise, 286-3847, Durham collect. To ice cream eating billfold thief: You took my billfold from Avery basement Thursday afternoon. I don't know your name but I do know your face. Return papers and billfold by mail to Macon Huffman, 408 Avery. LOST SOMETHING? Check by the A. P.O. lost and found in the basement of Smith Building, or call 933-3996. ! KR ES Kl N "S KRYSTAL. the stimulating psychological Puzzler, is a highly sensitive apparatus which consists of a crystal base and a pendulum. Though its operation is based solely on sound psychoiooicai principles, its functioning sees almost supernatural or occult as your thoughts are transmitted through the pendulum with no conscious effort on your part. Developed Dy Kreskin, the internationally acCl3'"eC mentaiist and ESP expert. KRESKINS KRYSTAL promises to tae you one step beyond into a world of fantastic entertainment and se i i-deveipent. Included with the Krystai is a 36-nate booklet which details tne va"ous mmd development techniques and pa'tv '3" ev BILLY ARTHUR. t.-Muate -jo. 9. T o. ,'"' ' ' I i f ' ; - ' ' M I . SIDEWALK "OVER 2,000 TO CHOOSE $ Tues.. Oct. 19 -Wed.. Oct. 20 Thurs.. Oct. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1971, edition 1
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