found. Campus calendar, lost and. MM A Harvard University School representative is scheduled to rr.eet with all interested students, Nov. 2 at 7:30 p.m. in 103 Binqnam. VOVEf in part icu lar are encouraged to attend this meeting. Individual irterviews can t arranged at the Placement Service for Wednevda morning, (November 2) t signing up in 211 Gardner. D&AFT COUNSELING : 7 p.m., Monday Thursday; 3 5 p.m., MondayFriday, in Room 2'2, Suite B. o the Union. There will te an in-porta't m,eeir.g o the Board of Academic Lieutenant Governors at 7 p.m. Tuevlay at Battle House. TOPICS I r 4 HUMAN SEXUALITY (HEED 33) for spring semester: Pink slips (permission of instructor slips) will te distributed Nov 10 at 8 p.m. in Room 213 of the Union. 125 ma.e and 125 female spans will be available. For more information, call 933-5505. Baha'i meetings every Monday at 8 p.m. m the Union and every Tuesday at 3 p.m. at 213 Purefoy Pd. Everyone is invited to attend. Carolina Friends School needs both men and women to lead coed physical edjcation in the upper school on Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1:45-2:45 p.m. CaH 323-f,237 or 333-2257 if interested. Male students interested in living in Car Building net semester may sign up for an interview through ronrja in room 102 CaT. If you have any questions about Carr and the International Student Center, see Jan ter Wengel (RA) in 102 or Steve Esthimer in 206. Individual pictures for the "Yackety Yait" will be taken in Room 205 of the Union. Make your appointment in Suite D of the Union. Discussions are now underway in the Department of Psychology to devise a new undergraduate curriculum and a revised program for the major. Any suggestions should be vent to Dr. E. Earl Baughman, director of Undergraduate Studies, or W. Grant Dahlstrom in Davie Hall. Human Sexuality Information and Counseling Service: Monday Friday , 2-5 p.m. and 7-10 p.m. in Suite C of the Union, 033-5505. N.C. Vets for Peace will be collecting signatures for their Universal Amnesty Petition ib''. c? the uoOer the entrance to the undergrad Anyone wshmq to obtain a cony petition m,ay get copies from f e vvvrCA office or Poom 251, Suite C o? e unc". o from the vets at the library. Religious truth can only be "-,:. w, through independent investigations of reaiity. Investigate the teachings of Ba'-.a'u'liu. Mondays, S p.m.. Student u-on. Tes-days, 6 p.m.. 213 P-refoy Poad. There will be an organizational meeting for all old and new members of the UNC Chapter of the N.C. Veterans for Peace at 7 p.m., Thurs., Nov. 4, in the Franc Porter Graham Lounge Of the Student Union. Plans for wir'er activities and statewide Amnesty Campaign activities win be discussed. There win a;so be rr.e"-.ters of the new chapter from N.C. Sta'e University at this meeting. An organizational meeting of Citizens for McGovern will be held Tuesday Nov. 2. 3 p.m. at the Community Church on Purefoy Road. Special guest is Mrs. George McGovern. The public is invited. The Christian Science College Organization will meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Wesley Foundation Library. Saul Aiinsy, Director, IncJjStna! Areas Foundation, will spea Nov. 2 at 8 p.m. m tr.e Great HaH, sponsored by the Carolina Forum and the School of Public Health. Dr. Earnest T. Smerdsn of the University of Florida will speak on the "Impact cf Technological Change on water Use Patterns" at the WATER RESOURCES SEMINAR at 1 p.m. today in 101 . School of Public Health. The EN VI RONMENTAL SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING SEMINAR will be held at 4 p.m. today in 265 School of Public Health. Charles M. Weiss, Professor of Environmental Biology at UNC will speak. Dr. Gert Bneger will speak at 6:30 p.m. today at NAVAL RESEARCH SEMINAR in the NROTC Building. His topic will be "Medical History as a Discipline." The POPULATION CENTER LECTURE DISCUSSION SEMINAR will be held at the Wesley Foundation at 7:30 p.m. today. Transcendental Meditation introductory lecture Wed., 8 p.m. Union. AH phitc-grapners i-tereste-3 m he 1972 YACKETY-YACK phcto St J" f '-. btac- na w-i'e p.ctures) should co-tact To Schr.a&ei in S e D cr o'i S33-1259. , . A ii .-te'este-3 peoc e 2 lOOr O" ts Y V -Y At t 'C ' .. e-: 7 The UNC St'j3e-t Chapter cf t-e Association for Comp-:--5 Vs-fy, In-. host Or. M.chae! J. F' -? Cct. Science Dewt"'"' JO"n$ h:;.,-, O'nrvers'ty today at 3 P.m. in 215 P". ni.-ps Ma : Flyri will so-sa C-n the tcpic M"-ter-a Resource Usage in Ccputer CgaIzatio-.' inCrrii ccffee hou' at 4-30 p."". C-c:-Science Lounge, New .vest. The Department O Hstsry a t .-. lecture ty Professor Smwfrj m. b'c- cf f. unive'sity cf Ca!'f o"-. at Sa- D-go toiay at 4 p.m. in The Fa-Cutty LO---9 e Dy Mji. 'diC: "The Tra"Sit'C r:v-s Sai -j.- Cap tS'iSm in C onf'Cversy . Seniors who wsh ta !ae the Fe-derai Se--.;:e Entrance E aMia! D"- mwst come by Placement Service in 211 Gardner and s.;- up BEFORE TAKING THE EXAM. The FSEE determines eligibility for ever 200 kinds cf zz with more than 50 Federal Agencies m u-ited States. Applications for t-e net Law Sc-oc Aptitude Test, which mst reach Prmceti be'ore Nov. 25 for the Dec. 18 testing, a-e o hand m 018 Peabody Hail. The Guida-ce a-d Test;ng Center has copies cf the PRE -LA .". HANDSOOK. Open 35, Mo-iay Friday. There will be a compulsory candidates meetmg for all Legislative, Honor Court, a - o Freshman class officer candidates today at 7-.2Z p.m. on the balcony of the Great Hall. An, candidate not attending the meeting will ha.e his name dropped from the ballot. Contact Larry Eggert. Elections Board Chairman (966-2567) if you have any questions. The UNC Department of Statist.cs colloquium will be held in265 Phillips at 4 p.m. today. Indra Mohan Chakravarti of the statistics department will speak cn "Generalized Inverses in a Linear Associative Algebra and The? Applications m the Analysis of a Class Design.' Refreshments served at 3:30 p.m. in 227 Phillips. A JEWISH COMMUNE is forming on the UNC Campus. If this is what you've been waiting for or if you're interested in finding out what goes, come to a meeting this Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Hillel House. If interested bu. can't attend, call Steve 933-4318. There will not be a meeting of the Young Democrats Club this week. The dub will meet again next Tuesday, Oct. 9. The Coffee House Committee of the International Bazaar will meet at 7:30 p.m. T-e JD"-S3" C. Smith UNC EnChjn -as : c ' "SS for a es wt-o wouid h to par: cpate. Any 'JSC r"e'1 vho are interested i. participating in the biack.white ech-ie are r;ed to apply. Appry at :- u-.c--ior ation Desk, of contact Pam c zb (r67-4135). The Car:Ji'i U"on Specia1 Pc-ects Co ittee wiM meet Tuesday, Nov. 2. at 7 p.m. m 2C-6 cf the Unicn. An me be's aC .-teested persons are urged to attend. Fe'iowship c Christian Athletes wiii ee: tO"ght at 8 P.m. in Eri-ghaus Green Roo for an m'ormal C'SCuSSion. Everyone invited. General CoMese students are urged to p c iP pre-registration information and d scss spring semiter programs with advisors through Nov. 15. Freshmen may a'so pc cp' description cf freshman seminar program. SNE A meeting today in 104 Peabcdy. Dr. Phillip Schiechty will be the guest speaker. Newspaper recycling drive win b held m the Chapel Hill Carrboro area Nov. 7 for 13 wees. Untied papers will be accepted at Sears, Eastgate, Glen Lennox. CCB University Square and Byrds Carrboro, from noon 3 p.m. Anyone interested in working on the drive may call Mrs. Maurice Brookhart, 929-7366 or Mrs. H.R. Turnbuil, 942-6193. FOUND: Ladies 14 ca.-at Buiova Watch, Thursday, Oct. 27. near Dey Had. Caii Anderson, 929-5206. FOUND: Ring with three keys between Joyner and the tennis courts. Claim in DTH office. LOST: Female Siamese cat, wearing b!ac collar, 54 W. Jones Ferry Road vicinity. Cat is sick, needs medicine badly. Keep her if you want, but let me know if she's ok. Can 942-7371 immediately. LOST: Set of contact lenses in a Murine carrying case. Call Bob Botch, 929-6115. GSs T I111" --' si TONIGHT thru SATURDAY, NOV. 6 IN PERSON? "Mr. Excitement" Himself The Hilarious JACKIE VERNON Remember him or her with STUDIO CARDS DTH Classifieds! FOR SALE: Sony receiver 6050 dual turntable, 1 year old; 12 x 12 royal blue rug, large painted chest; couch, mattress, box spring, frame; mirror; misc. toys, dishes, stainless steel table service, antique pine chest. Call 929-3563. FOR SALE: Kasino guitar AMP, excellent condition, used less than 6 months. $325 or best offer. Call 967-2906. FOR RENT: '70 furnished carpeted trailer l'2 baths, 2 bedrooms. Ideal for students. Located 6 miles from campus in college-oriented trailer park. Call 933-6358. Reasonable. DATING SERVICE! Meet more members of the opposite sex in Chapel Hill. Details, write box 77346, Atlanta, Ga. 30309. FOR SALE: 1970 Honda CB450, 9.000 miles, or come by Vic's Shell on Airport Road. 1960 VW Bug in Good Condition for sale. It's fast, good-looking, sexy, and the cutest thing in Chapel Hill. This character costs $340. 942-8252. ROOMMATE WANTED: to share apartment shag carpet, 2 bedrooms. IV? bath, air, pool must appreciate good stereo and clean apartment. $80mo. 942-3059, 967-6888. Help! Need FOUR TICKETS to JETHRO TULL Concert. Anyone with unwanted tickets please call 933-6171 after 6 p.m. NEED JETHRO TULL TICKETS desperately. Will pay scalper's price. Call 967-4757 between 5 and 7. 1964 MERCURY, black. 2-door, straight drive, $375. 1961 Plymouth station wagon, automatic, $150. Cheap cause we need money. May bargain. 967-4655. BARGAINS! Reconditioned and New Furniture, reupholsteied sofa-beds, couches, (from $49.50), and chairs (from $14.50). Used sterilized mattresses from $5.95. Beds from $6.50. TV's from $24.50. Unfinished book cases, desks, chests. Delivery arranged. GOODWILL STORE. 1121 W Mam, Durham, across from Duke campus. 942-3141 toll free. Daily 96, Friday 99. MBA's AND MANAGEMENT MAJORS: Will pay cash for research papers 10 pages. Subject: specific area of management planning or related field. Minimal quantitative analysis please. Contact immediately : "Papers'" P.O. Box 1605, Gainesville, Florida 32601. 250cc '67 Harley Davidson Sprint. Recent complete overhaul by distributor. Under 300 pounds. New Bell Topex siz 71? helmet included. 942-7264. This Week's Happenings In the Feature Case A nice selection fron our fall buying - including poe.s and musicians known and unknown . Prices are moderate, and you may find a long-lost poem or two. In the Show Vindow 1 1 terfy Ti'clb'itS We thought it night be fun to show this group of uniaport ant but pleasant literary treats, and here they are. Plus Your Free Copy of Old Book News, with a checklist of AMERICANA, is now ready. -TU Off Booh. Corner 137 A East Rosexary Street Chapel Hill Chapel Hill. N. C. i - - rr - : ( e or ifw'1 IS 4:30 7:00 Entrance back of the Zoom DAILY SPECIALS ONLY $.97 Mon. BAKED CHICKEN w Bercy Sauce Tues.-ROAST BEEF Wed.-CHOPPED SIRLOIN w Spanish Sauce Thurs. BEEF ON BUN Fri.-VEAL CUTLET served w 2 veg. & bread THE SAME WITH TOSSED SALAD & CHOICE OF DRESSING - ' " "U""1'-" -J"- '- -L---3 XMXXXXXMKMXV.W.XMXVXW.XXXXMXXMMX fr. 1 I II llll Ill I I I I II II I Mil I MIIJiHl.illlli lltW.PH 1 is I iff i: ' - I - ;:;k2 ; ""----i GOOD AUTO FOR SALE: '60 Buick, good motor, tires runs smooth even in cold weather! A good deal. Freshman must" sell Call Wes. 933-5338. FOR SALE: 1966 Honda 50. Dependable and in good running condition. Helmet included. $75. Call 942-8032. BICYCLES: Good supply 10 and 3 speed ADULT BIKES. Scott and Coble Cycle & Mower. 721 Chapel Hill Rd.. at Tucker St., Burlington, IM.C. 227-2295. $50 REWARD FOR INFORMATION leading to arrest of person seen slashing top of a 1966 Blue Sunbeam Convertible Sports Car in University Square Saturday night. 929-2046. FOR SALE: 20 watt Stereo Receiver. BSR turntable, excellent condition good sound at a small price. $65 for the pair. 968-9071. FOR SALE: '70 Yamaha 350cc. $575. Call 544-2264 (Durham) collect or 933-7397: Room A407 New Chem Building. 1 bedroom apt., carpet, drapes, air cond.. pool excellent condition. Need to sub-lease. Call S67-7916 after 4:30 p.m. MOBILE HOME: 10'x56' New Moon Trailer for sale; two bedrooms, furnished, draperies, fully carpeted, two air conditioners, washer, dryer, patio, awning. Call 942-6429 after b p.m. DEAR DEBBIE: HAPPY BIRTHDAY my peepity bunny. love you. Love, your bunny, David. i I i Yon might be happier at Etma, We think we might have what you're looking for. Something 27 million people depend on for security and a better life. We'd like you to consider taking a sales management position with .-Etna Life and Casualty. We have hundreds of broad gauge management positions, both in the held and in the home office, that pay sub stantial salaries right from the start. They all take creativity and hard work. But the rewards can be very high. To yourself. To others. If the insurance business is still the Overlooked Profession to you. it's prob ably because you haven't heard the whole truth about it yet. How fast-changing it has become. Or how sophisticated. Or that it is where the greatest variety of job opportunities are today, insurance probably takes more college graduates than any other profession. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer and a JOBS-participating company. We have jobs in all divisions of our company. If you'd like face-to-face con tact with people we have many positions that w ill give you immediate contact with the public. If you'd rather deal with your co-workers and other professionals, we have those, too. Tell us your preference, and we can work it out between us. A brochure called "The Whole Truth" goes into the specifics on sales manage ment as well as other opportunities. It'll tell you how .-Etna works, what it does, and how you can become part of it. It's an honest picture of an honest business. Why not stop in at your placement office and read it. Today, one out of six Americans looks to .Etna for insurance protection. You might build a successful career helping us help mam more. OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE LIFE & CASUALTY enate, Nixon wrestle with foreign aid bill WASHINGTON - Congressa! aJteurr.rr.er.t b Thar.ksr.v.r.g ar?rrJ '- question Sunda . scuttled by the Senate's unexpected re;ec::rr. cf the fcreur. i.i ' Christmas adjournment appears more likely. President Nixon conferred Sunday with his ccngres.s:onal Laor. antar.: i -administration moved to restore the foreign aid program. The pregra: is s -Vsi"!.i t v. --. V ,-,v t? h--T ?u V'-i --t Timmons. his assistant for congressional relations, that He wants first to hav extended, and second, to work out legislation for a fully co-ordinated procra As the lawmakers end their weekend recess, thev must been to cor.stru is.ati. nstrut a r resurrect the program without interfering with other le completed before the end of the session. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is scheduled to meet this morn.: discuss the S2.9 billion aid authorization the Senate defeated Friday. Mayors, governors races highlight Tuesday voting n rh ilade ... I I . . 1 . a:; A A t! WASHINGTON - Voters cast ballots Tuevda in ma oral elects Baltimore. Cleveland. San Francisco. Boston. Indianapolis and G .r . !-.d . governor of Mississippi and Kentucky. Several contents hav e racial implications Charles Evers. black mayor of Favette. Misv. and brother : a via:- civ.: leader, is running as an independent m - three-wa race for cover:: Miv-is.p Cleveland, the nations's largest cit with a black mavor. retmng Car1. B S:.'w thrown his organization behind another Negro. -Xmole R. Pmckncy Mayor Richard G. Hatcher. 3S. the first black t. be elected t"a :. ev;-.-.-win reelection handily in Gary. In Philadelphia, former Police Commissioner Frank Kizo is hchtl;. .'av.-re.! Thacher Longstreth. and in Boston. Rep. Louise Day Hicks D-M.s to be successful in her challenge of mavor Kevin H. hite. i th R:.z i have run strong "law and order" campaigns. San Francisco Mayor Joseph L. Alioto was expected to deteat t including Dianne Feinstein, president of the city's board oj supervisors In Baltimore, the Democrats' 5 to 1 edge m registration was exp-.v city hall to City Council President William Shaffer. Richard G. Iular. 39, mayor of Indianapolis, president o! a Nat; : Mayors, and prime mover in a drive for city county merger that made of the 10 largest cities in the nation, also was expected to win. Thomas D. Emberton has the blessing of retiring Gov. I onie B. Nu: the Kentucky state house. Emberton's opponents are Lt. Gov. Vver.de! "Ihnnv" r'h.Tndltr fnrmpr eovernor and commissioner ot mai-r leacue Bomb blast damages ritain's largest building Z7 LONDON - A bomb explosion ripped a gaping hole Sunday in the upper le the Post Office Tower, Britain's tallest building, and an anonymous telephone said the outlawed Irish Republican Army (IRA) was responsible. In the Irish Republic, however, a spokesman for the militant wing sai organization had nothing to do with the explosion. The explosion sent tons of concrete, steel g.irders and rubble crashing hur.dr feet onto cars and streets below. Police said there were no injuries and the stability : the tower was unaffected. In other action in Northern Ireland, at least 11 persons were wounded in .m; explosions and street fights. Three persons, two of them British soldiers. d:e 1 ' wounds suffered earlier in the week. Brezhnev visiting Berlin BERLIN Leonid I. Brezhnev, secretary general of the Soviet Commur..-t P ::! prolonged his stay in East Berlin Sunday for talks which diplomats said were d ' breaking the deadlock in East and West German negotiations on Berlin. Brezhnev arrived in East Berlin Saturday afternoon on his way back t V . from Paris. Eastern sources had said his Berlin visit would end early Sur.iV., ) Brezhnev decided to continue the talks. Western diplomats said they believed Brezhnev stayed on to explain to a,! German leaders the Soviet desire for a quick conclusion to the East-West German ta!- . t ! implementing the Big Four ambassadors agreement on the status of Berlin In other news, Communist sources said Sunday the Soviet Cnion is dr.;. .r u plans for a "United Nations of Europe" to be presented to a European .ni;. conference. The sources said the Kremlin envisages a forum where disputes 1 vU err European nations eastern and western could be discussed peacefully. Angela Davis trial opens SAN RAFAEL, Calif. - The murder trial of black militant Scholar Angela Du-.i, : scheduled to begin today after 10 months of pretrial manueverir.g. MLss Davis is charged with masterminding a brazen scheme to free sever:! San. Quentin prisoners from a courtroom in San Mann County on Aug. 7. I'd 70. 'Ib.t attempt led to a bloody shootout that killed four persons. MLss Davis, an avowed Communist and former assistant professor at l.C L . ha been held without bail for more than a year. Her trial has become the local p :n! for widespread protest on the grounds that it is politically motivated. YDC hits marijuana laws GREENSBORO - North Carolina Young Democrats Sunday were on record again.! penalties for possession of marijuana, for abortion and with their first statewide b'a.k officer in history. It was all a result of Saturday's state convention here and an indication that c,2!e?e YDC groups were wielding a stronger influence in the organization. Mrs. Armetta McPherson of Orange County became the first black elected to a stat YDC post when she defeated Jim Bailey of Johnson County for first vice president. Student factions and liberals led the fight in the hotly-debated marijuana Issue for the 293-231 vote calling for the abolition of penalties for possession of marouar.a. The convention voted that a woman should have the right to terminate her pregnancy with the assistance of a licensed physician. China decides on name UNITED NATIONS - Communist China made it dear Sunday that its first move as a new United Nations member would not be to pounce on the presidency of the Security Council. In a telegram to U.N. Secretary -General U Thant, Peking said it wanted ta be known officially as "China, People's Republic of," when it takes its seat in the world body. Had Peking demanded to be known as the People's Republic of China alphabetically it would have automatically been in line to take over the Security Council presidency for November following the October presidency of Nicaragua