Frriay. October 22. 1971 The Dairy Tar HH In Asheville N.C. Democrats will meet aat the Grove Park Inn in Asheville Friday and Saturday for the 11th annual Vance-Aycock event. Trie event is held annually to raise money and present candidates to the public. According to Roger Foushee, chairman of the Orange County Democratic party, it is a general party conference for initial political organization. Among Democratic figures attending the 550-per-ticket affair will be Gov. and Mrs. Bob Scott and Wilbur Mills, chairman of the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee. Camp-in' to construction by Lynn Smith Staff Writer A "camp-in" this weekend at Joyce Kilmer Forest will climax FCOS's three-year fight to stop the construction of a highway through the virgin Kilmer Forest and adjoining Slickrock Creek Watershed. Hardin Minor, an tCOS worker, urged conservation-minded students to join the protest. "Students can opposed the construction, enjoy the campout and meet other people who are interested in saving the environment," he said. The campers will leave campus Friday afternoon and meet at Horse Cove Campground, one mile from the memorial forest. "We need as many people as possible," Minor said. "This will be the focus for all opposition to the road." The Sierra Club, Trout Unlimited (a fish protection group), Smokey Mountains Hiking Club and Conservation Council of North Carolina will join ECOS i Cr" it- The Supremes will appear in concert Oct. 23, 8 p.m. at Carmichael Auditorium. Tickets $2.00 MNORfG1N?' Beautiful, handsome, cute? Fat or skinny? Groovy or straight? Or just pbin plain? YOU are the one we are looking for! This could be your chance to do photographic modeling for well-known advertisers such as General Electric and Wachovia. Call or write Susan Brinkley, Norling Studios, Box 149, High Point. N.C. 919 885-8121 8 .Democrats Also attending will be gubernatorial contenders Lt. Gov. Pat Taylor, State Sen. Hargrove (Skipper) Bowles (D-Guilford), State Atty. Gen. Robert Morgan and Hugh Morton, western N.C. businessman and entrepreneur. Candidates for lieutenant governor who will attend the banquet include Jim Hung, speaker of the N.C. House, Phil Godwin and Roy Sowers, head cf the N.C. Conservation department, Fourth District Congressman Nick Galifianakis, a candidate for U.S. Senator, will also attend. Foushee, urging students to attend, said, "There is a personal element in climax protest at a dedication assembly at 1:00 p.m. Saturday. Minor asked students to make a special effort to attend the rededication meeting. "Gov. Bob Scott, 1 1th District Congressman Roy Taylor, the U.S. Forest Service and the Department of Transportation have all been invited," he said. "We need a lot of people so they can see how concerned everyone is about this type of destruction." Guided hikes will begin after the meeting. Carl A. Reiche, a Florida conservationist, will lead a kike starting 8:00 a.m. Sunday. Transportation has been the greatest problem in organizing the protest. "We're having trouble getting people into driven' cars," said Minor. "There may be enough to take a bus." Kilmer Forest is an 8-hour drive from Chapel Hill, on the North Carolina-Tennessee line. Anyone interested in forming car or tent pools should come by the ECOS office, Suite B, Student Union or call 933-6757. 3 r C i S0 -yuy j nr A. f ' f t . r Norling Studios photographic imaginations to meet politics. This is a good opcrturuty for young persons to get to know and talk to these people." A reception sponsored by the Young Democrats Cub will Jack off the conference from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday. It is open to the public. Admission to a cocktail hour, from 6 to 7 p.m. Friday is by ticket only. Individual candidates and county organizations will sponsor hospitality rooms at around 10 p.m. Friday for talking with the public. The Buncombe County Democratic Women will sponsor a breakfast at 9 a.m. Saturday. The breakfast is open to the public on a pay-as-you-go basis. Two open champagne receptions will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Saturday. Scott and Mills will be present at one reception. The Western N.C. Friends of Galifianakis is sponsoring the other meeting. Admission to another cocktail hour from 6 to 7 p.m. Saturday is by ticket only. Following this at 7:15 p.m. will be the banquet, with Mills as the after-dinner speaker. It too requires a ticket. After the banquet, candidates and county organizations will again be holding open hospitality rooms. Several Democratic leaders such as Foushee, Carl Smith from the Orange County-Chatham County district, Orange County Chief Solicitor Herbert Pierce have contributed tickets so students can attend some of the events. Fousheee has indicated he will do his best to insure admission for students. Fall overen roll me nt hurt phone company by Ellen Gilliam Staff Writer Most of the student complaints filtered through the Chapel Hill Telephone Company each week concern service or billing policies, according to Gary McKelvey, phone company commercial engineer. McKelvey, who has been with the phone company since the first of the year, explained the procedures and problems encountered by the utility with the massive fall influx of students. After the student notifies the phone company of a desire to have his dorm phone connected, the application must be processed, wires in the campus phone plant must be connected and numbers must be sent to information services in Chapel Hill and Greensboro, McKelvely said. Then numbers are compiled and the accounts are listed with the billing department. McKelvey said the S5 connection fee, charged students and general subscribers alike, is intended to defray these initial expenses. Bills are sent out at the first of the month and if payment is not made within about two weeks, notices of due payment are issued, McKelvey said. If the payments are not made within 5-7 days following the notice, phone service is discontinued and the customer must pay an additional S5 re-connection fee to have it turned on again, McKelvey said. An intercept, or recorded message saying the line has been disconnected, is not hooked up to the line for about two weeks following the disconnection. &2T C215 878-5800 Woman s 1 Medical Assistance Prescriptions Accurately;! Filled : Lenses Duplicated Headquarters For Quality' Surpasses Contact Lenses Fitted . Contact Lens Accessories ' J ohn and Lib Southern 121 E. Franklin St Between Varsity Theatre and Intimate LP 1 Campus Tne C"c-e' M.H Stj3-ts z VtGJrf" Co-""--fT! ,,-! V;nsjr 4 CO C. . tne Ui;i. An t ' s i-vfl it jdet i- e' es" m Senate McGj'- s :i-S Si: re ur93 ts attend. Ah st jCrt -3 '?Cu:'Ty i y. i -kg to r'"- a Ci'iif to Ce-e -&: s to "ear j-n Kt" $ &Ceen Monday nnj'-t C'ease yDwir rae at t!e YW-YMCA O'fice. Piai are to Cy 6:45 p."-!. Morlay. Drrerj 3 r ' $ mdi r-eet at te Mrn-v; lot &e"'""a Me- onai hii aa t-e V. Ar,yc-r interested c ja - c t n-g or ea2-5 a Card Out) lor stjSenti iteeitefl ii CiJyi-v; g -. , hearts, etc.. piease cc-itact Aia Mr i" Su :e A cf tne U-c 933-11 57. Tr-e D-ni Literary Socetes tU et Tuesday at 7.-30 p.m. m Ne '.est. DaCie Atnas will soea fer recent novel. r".e'rs Ecesus." Eweryoe rs welcome to atte-3 The AV.-S will hOI3 its ret nieetirS Wonfljy at 6:45 p.n. m trve Union. Ail A AS representatives and mtereited women are urged to attend. There win be a meeting for al interested wcrwmg on the publicity committee Of the International Handicrafts bazaar tocay at 3:00 p.m. in the upstairs of the Y. The Campus Series of Debates will meet at 8:00 p.m. in the Union on Monday. The topic will be, "Resolved: Man Should Pro-gram His Own Evolution Through Genetic Control." Everyone is welcome to attend. Modern Brida! Fashion Show will be held Monday at 7:00 p.m. in the Newman Foundation. A drawing for a trip to Florida will also be held. All junior and senof women are invited. Craige Graduate Center Coffee House will be open every Friday and Saturday night at 9:00 P.m. to grad students. Talent wanted to perform. If interested, call Chris Pederson, 933-7256. MOREHEAD COLLEGE RESIDENTS: Your Counseling Team (ask your R A for details) now has a telephone in Graham basement. Call 933-8158, Monday-Thursday, 9:00 p.m. - midnight. North Carolina Civil Liberties Union will honor Charlotte civil rights lawyer Julius "Many complaints are centered around this issue, which many people consider to be a disservice, " McKelvey said. He said the large volume of cut-offs and the wearing out of equipment accounts for the phone company's policy on intercepts. Other complaints center around the policy of requiring deposits of subscribers whose phones have been disconnected due to failure to pay phone bills on time. "The deposit is simply a security safeguard," McKelvey said, and is determined by the customers credit rating. Liberals nominate candidates An organizational meeting for the Liberal Coalition, a group which will run candidates in the fall Student Government elections, was held Wednesday night. The group, which has 28 members, nominated persons for 16 of the 29 Student Legislature seats which will be voted on in the Nov. 9 election. Those nominated were off-campus Alan Nagle, Robert Grady, Charlie Dean, Tom Allen, Ken Coverdell, Leo Gordon, Nelson Drew and Susan Case. Dorm students nominated were: Craige-Bob Gilliam, and Doug Buckley, James-Barbara Nagle and Marsha Davenport, Cobb-Vicki Gordon, Granville -Wand3 Rushing and George Karl, Alderman-Susan Burgess. Eight of the 16 nominees are former or present members of the Legislature. -3V-& fVovtlS Zippy Pzp-zrh ack S Tk2. Old (SotrxGoY Vs Opposite Tcwr. Parking Area 133 A East Hose3ry Street ill Poems by William Bixby ON LOVE - BIRTH - DEATH LIFE - and - NATURE $1.00 PPD i-s & i-t:-. -:. Vd. Ce. C6437 activities C" res it 1 : -C " Z t'. f : r z it f-e -rv Ar-rt r2 CDSts $6 J5. Se--3 c- t" ?eve,-t to SCCLU, Bo 1S?2. G'ee-vr-r' r S--'i -3 Cutf are te2 ts atte5. Tre it :f C;- r" r- - " z'z i- roe- T-s Twfviif it 3 : Z z ' te ' F-uti:". -s rr DAFT COUSSELISG: 7. CO - 9 C C - . r --CJ y T - rs -3 , . 3 ro 5 vC p .'r--2i cr.ii. i- Rd.v 255, S'te 3. U-r-, B'eai"V3 ca z- ;:-z 4 write'S i'S i't'StS tC 3i' i.-iz - i rv3.-siSt jrt a't Z4''3. Fi'St eet i!i be neta S-"v2ay at 1 C: c.r-i. at Pt. t. Bj 231. Fa'T'-to- P Ca ' ?-sr-7.- a -re Baa'is er . r " at S " ? z - e U " 1 : . i Z every Tes-2ay at S.CC z . at 213 P'e'cy r a 2 . 'y;i s e"; t : - attend. Tr-e N. C. Sy-ocui jn s-njy we: viH be heia tDiay in fe 4tn 'lo-cr Fj;t, Lour.;. Oey Man, b-; - -.9 a: 9-02 a T-e topic: "Te Yc.'s Cs fyer: Se;!ess Uoreparea'" AM UNC facwity and stde-ts a-e ni:ed to attend. Peace Corps and VISTA recruiters :x tne Vourt and tne U"on :r rsf a, dsjesticms about tne o53irations. Anyone interested m CnQ s,:n manmnq tables tor tne N.C. Veterans ." Pf . may sign up m tne YM-VWCA c"ice. Nomination forms 4 Of tne Order c4 te Va'Kynes, honest campus noncxary for ;en are now aaiiaDie at :ne union Df Outstanding junior and senior onji are eligible lor nomination. Forms must be returned to tne Des or maiied to Bex 32. Carolina Union, by today. Hungry FRIED CHICKEN Try our Delicious Hungary Jack HOT Take Out Fried Chicken HUGH'S FOOD HUGH WESTRAY, Owner HOMECOMING SPECIAL at THE MOBIL GAS and FOOD STORE 2 POPULAR BRANDS OF YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE AT $5 A CASE WE HAVE THE LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN! COME OUT AND SEE. DELIVERY AT NIGHT FOR LARGE ORDERS OF BEER AND VIIIE EUtebil gas & POOD STORE 929-5 056 SUNDAY, OCT 31-8 p.m. THE LETTERMEN in concert Prices: $3 - $4 - $5 TICKETS NOW ON SALE COLISEUM BOX OFFICE - PAUL ROSE -FRIENDLY CENTER or BY MAIL - co LETTERMEN, Greensboro Coliseum, 1921 W.Lee St. Greensboro, N.C. GREENSBORO COLISEUM calendar T" T::;3 E 1 : a ' o"s.o a w-a'.a- 3. -'-' at t- Co 0 r Crrs S---3a at 6 00 p m. Tets 'e fl.50 a? te d f?c3 ,-vsd .--e ad y r P-dr -9. tx3. ten. oba. rtc- FCUS3 -.bcap r rJ Ca-mo. Ct 5 dd --,. 52 26 91. LOST- 9;- a 1 S- t or -flr a ' n-d . t''od a et n .cj-.t o Gra""-ie Sovtv Pi;Ufi ?o E .s v-- C-- a-. 211 L'S. 933 153 LCST Tji tS 0 j ' , p"oCaby m u -o -otty. Ca ! 933-S 18 2 c eart at Ucn Des. LOST: i.ad-es' t;tc ve v-e 1 cev:r pt on sv asves i-1 c ty cf mi -yi Cctrb 17. Cm 2t-3755. 0'a . c. -et. Regard LCST- .Sate" 'tn ia' Mac c-- st-es on bad. bia; ce 'tn t-'.t Prmjn -u v. Ca Jwd-y . f6-2595. ra. LOS T t? ed and tK O a 1 . C a 4 7 7 . ; 7 a ? . Z-'-t . z z e;t LOST A 1 u m , r-u ..f ra-ed c ev: "C : 4-sa$ves n b'ac cae. Cai Pa-' Fy'cvr, 966-23 22. LOST B ach !-e! n mk!,v'v Su-v!y Ca'i 9-c-S-i;S . LOST: Contact 'nses m fiat n,;e cate CM A. B Mayes. 9tS-9027 or 9426929 LOST: B ve draper ba m bach c' red Canjio on Mjnay 54 Octrber 1 Can 94C-3552 before 3:30 p m. LOST SOMETHING: CneK by tne A.P.O lost and found in tne basement cf Sm.n Building, 933-3996. CHEESE MIXERS COLD BEER WINE CHAMPAGNE SNACKS COLD CUTS ICE & PARTY STORE Across from the Tavern OLD AIRPORT RD. HWY. 86 3 Miles from Center ol Town Open Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. O