Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 7, 1974, edition 1 / Page 4
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I TT? C"y Trr Htti Thursday, February 7, 1374 ,i ' J .",'tu'J . .V.V. . .'V. rf.V-V. V ; . . .-. V.'.W.V.' .VV.V-V.'..-S V. .-.V.V rf- . .......... . el S2r"r'!EI r. (( V it (TBCiDfr! v- Vrf4i n one 5 .if t (i ) II f J j 5 by Csn-ra L"..ar F cctura VVr'lar When you first put them on, you might think you've got your feet on backwards. Ar.d, for a while, they feel just as different as th.y lock. But then something starts to happen, and all of a sudden you don't want to take them off. Ever. They go by the name of Earth Shoes, and aside from their natural, muted colors and healthy leather, the most earthy thing about them is that they recreate the original way of walking, the way it was done before the days of platform soles and chiropractors. The secret of Earth Shoes is in a special kind of construction which allows the body's v 'eight to rest primarily on the heels, below toe level. The effect on your posture and your aching back, promises the Earth Shoe brochure, is the same as if you were walking barefoot in the sand or across an open field. There are a few tales of miracle cures, but most reports testify to less dramatic, but significant results, such as improved posture, respiration and circulation. But the best benefit by far is that Earth Shoes just feel good. From an initial one-man operation in Copenhagen 13 years ago, the Earth Shoes venture has mushroomed into a booming international business. An American traveler's discovery of the Danish-made shoes led to the debut of a Manhattan Earth Shoes store 10 years ago. Meanwhile, boosted by publicity in the Whole Earth Catalog, 33 additional shops have opened in the United States to accommodate the growing Earth Shoes mania. . One of these newer stores sits atop a red, white and blue metal fire escape leading up SPEEDS Grand Prix O Tuilio Alloy Tubing Throughout O Chroma Hsadlugs, Forks, and Stays O Campagnolo Nuavo Tipo Hubs Campagnolo Valentino Deraileurs O Weinnman CentarpuSI Brakes O Alloy Stem and Bars O Fismmo cr Nisi Alloy Rims O Leather Saddle, Men's; Padded Plastic, Women's. O Clement Gumwall Tires 106 M. Grehcm,St., Q Carolina Chapel HIHj lWr ' V S r o C.7.ALL GROUPS 6 SESSIONS -24 HOURS VOLUMINOUS HOME STUDY MATERIAL MAKE-UP LESSONS INCLUDED Register flow for nay Emm Lcod CIossos f J FOR SALE 133 Ford V.u.,ang Hardtop 6 cylinder etreisht shift Estate saia ale bid prior to 15 February contact F.W. $ehedr, 01 Stmt, f SS-13C9 for further irrlormetion. IVC stereo receiver, tumtabte and ipaakers with warranty, $200; also Soundatlgn reeeiver, S-treck playar, BSR turntable and speakers with 15 Iraa tapes. $2001 829-5838. F.U 33Y SHS3TS, to order, from England, substantial savings on present inflated American prices. Lars colour rang available. (Call: 933-8755). For Sale Piortr SX-S2S receiver. One year old. Still under warrsnry. WW take best offer over $223.00. RatalSa now tor $333.35. Call Clayton at 833-3813. 603 F iCiNT LP's FOR SALE. 50a-$2.00. All type. Wad. Fab. em through Sat Feb. 9th. 12-4 p.m. TOWN HALL near Cetiee Shop. Beaties, Stones. FORD MUSTANG 1SS8 V-8 blue hard-top decent condition: must eetl; good mileage; best offer above $503.00. Call 829 AZ'B or come to 104 James Street Carrboro. For Sela 1S34 Chevy Van. Good mechanical condition. Six cylinder engine- Call 842-7827 after 8:00. sSansul 2:::X Stereo Receiver, Fisher Royal 6A Speaker. utl sail, will take bast offer. 842-7014. 25 mm Pentax Spotmatlc II, 1 1.4. Mint, UU under warranty. $215. ZIAZ Tawkmar 135 mm tone 1 2.5, $110. Stan IS unset S33-7231 or 625-7232. For Sale: One pair Fisher 1S2 Speakers; cost $183 together new; will sell at $ 35 for the pair now, call Hirsch at 83-8371 or 3-8378. S 71.? ICS: GET THS MOST FOR YOUR MONEY FINEST EQUIPMENT LOWEST PRICES; FULL WARRANTIES: CALL ANN SHACHTMAN, 842-7172; VISIT, 1510 CUMBERLAND RD. CHECK RECEIVER SPECIALS LIMITED CUANTITIESI FOR RENT Two Granville Towers West leases (same room) for sale. WUI negotiate. CU 633-5254 day or night t n ca 4rl J (SoSUrs. 3' miles from campus. 2 a 3 bodroowi moti e homes. $33 to $133 per month. Telephone 828-2254 1 to 5. . WANTED t-1 C sod usd motorcycle helmet at reasonable price. Ci '. i:3 iZ'.Z or t;3-c:ai and leave message. i ;TIO: r. J.-r to Fty3v!iie every weekend. I Sesv f ..' 1 1 " noons, rfttam V.onlsy mom'nes. Celt $:7-TJI3 Kt? tylrvj. F. . '-ATI! L: 2 c::3 KSEDS nCOU. V.'rJ!RS to share i j t ;s- ?. Cs. i 617-7433 after 73 p.m. Leave meesase. t : d t , ' :-y '"9t :th own tramportatJofvTuea. fatrwoowa 3-S " 3. FHone c;3-73t 9. Earth Shoe and from Franklin Street. Inside, seated on a wooden bench against a backdrop of hothouse window greenery,. Joey Sinreich, co-owner with his wife Sherrie of the Chapel Hill shop, commented on the Earth Shoes he sells." "Most people love them," he reported. "It almost makes me feel like I'm doing a public service." $ 15500 Owned and Operated by Students of UNC & Duke VAiir!l(Q)IJ J St BaaasM-Hia-aS KttttilllBlUIMP 4kwy f, Summer Accountant to audit records for workshops and conferences at Granville Towers. Salary Includes furnished apartment and meals. May thru August Hours 12 a.m. to 8 a-jn. Monday thru Friday. Contact Don Cobb Granville Towers. Weeded Immediately: Easy-going but somewhat together dude to take 3rd bedroom In furnished country house 12 miles out $60 a month. Call 933-3271 after 6:00. We need a ride to Wash. D.C. on Thurs. afternoon, desperately. Call: Mike or John 833-8916. EXPERIENCED RESEARCH PERSON NEEDED FOR MATERIAL FOR PLAY ABOUT MOORE COUNTY. HOURLY PAY, WORK IN SPARE TIME. WRITE JOE SIMMONS, 102 GRAHAM MEMORIAL, CHAPEL HILL. 1 $85 to $95 PER WKPART TIME. Unlimited earning potential In addressing envelopes at home. Companies pay top money for that "personal" touch. For further information regarding opportunities with these companies, send $2 to Phoenix Advertising, P.O. Box 11707, Atlanta GA. 30305. MISCELLANEOUS Lost Pair of glasses In black and blue case, lost Monday on waN behind Hiil HaM at lunchtime. Call 842-2298 or Music Library. Couptee Interested in forming a discussion group on sex role and "Nuclear Family" hassles, call 829-8446 after five. . LETS MAKE A DEAL DAYS. COME MAKE US AN OFFER ON CLOTHES ONLY. MON.-SAT. GOOD AS NEW SHOPPE 413 W. ROSEMARY. HRS. 10-5. 829-3203. OVERSEAS JOBS Australia, Europe. S. America, Africa. . Students!! professions and occupations $700 to $3000 monthly. Expenses paid, overtime, sightseeing. Free Information. TRANS WORLD RESEARCH CO. Dept. C3, P.O. Box 603, Corta Madera, CA. 84925. SUMMER TRAINING OPPORTUNITY: PAID SUMMER TRAINING PERIOD IN NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND THIS SUMMER, AND GUARANTEED EMPLOYMENT UPON GRADUATION. TO FIND OUT IF YOU ARE ELIGIBLE CONTACT LT. OLSHINSKI, NAVAL ARMORY, UNC 933 1193. TAKE IT FROM CAROLOGUE-r-AdCESS TO NORTH CAROLINA: "Far and away the finest of the secondhand clothes, furniture, etc. pieces we've been to anywhere." P.T.A. THRIFT SHOP, 508 W. Franklin St For fast professional service on quality hi-fi stereo components call John Florence at 829-2841, Monday Saturday, 8:00-5:00. STUDY AT OXFORD THIS SUMMER. TWO SESSIONS: JUN2 23-JULY 23; JULY 23-AUGUST 22. COURSES IN LITCaATUr.2, PHILOSOPHY, ART, AND RELIGION. ROCMstOAXO, TUITION $413.60 PER TERM. WRITE DRl JAMES STEW AST, UNC-A, ASHEVILLE. N.C. - ASOmON, EiRTH CONTROL JNFO REFERRAL NO rzi. Up to 24 weeks. Genera! anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal R-stton also available. Free pregnancy test Call PCS, Non profit, SS2-2SS-7SS 3. ,SUff photo by Alan Gmt its mirror imago Are the strange new shoes just another craze, like spike heels and platforms? "They don't have the qualities that a fad usually has that is, the exploitation of some current style," Sinreich said. "They buck the current styles," Another clue that implies the new shoes are being absorbed into the steady mainstream of American life is that the CICVVJ Vul IIN TI - A Servica DOC WAT ' ' - ' in concert ! WAIT CHAPEL WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY Saturday, Feb. 16, 8:15 P. General Admission Tickets - Advance $3.50; Available at: Mail Order: Wake Forest Ticket Office Wake Forest Univ. Union Box 7655 UNC-G (Elliot Hall) Winsfon-Salem, N.C. 27109 11HH tHUtjtlU- ScliSzopiis'Siiis Shop Os Closing Oowo f- F" n ri ipr-r OTJ YH3E WORKSI START UITH 50 to 65 OFF! ' I i i i 3 SCHOZOPHREPJIA SHOP BACEC OF EniLTOrJ'S 1 ) Chapel Hill store now has a license with the post office which allows postal employees to choose their own pair of Earth Shoes and sign them off as a uniform item. In a competitive bracket with top-name footwear. Earth Shoes now carry sales tags ranging from 523.50 for sandals to $42.50 for hiking boots, keeping them well within the luxury category for most dollar-conscious university students. Yet the cost of the shoes doesn't seem to be keeping people from buying. Many customers gratefully rationalize the high cost of the shoes against durability records of up to three years of average wear. "Lots of people come in and try the shoes, know that they want them and then come back in a couple of months after they've saved the money," Sinreich said. Noting that most buyers eventually return with a friend, he added, "People with the shoes are our best ads." What if everyone in Chapel Hill ended up having Earth Shoes? "Some people ask me that," Sinreich said. "I'd be perfectly satisfied. I'd just close up shop and go home." Even if the Earth Shoes revolution reaches this point, it seems unlikely that the Sinreichs will be able to leave town as long as happy customers keep writing and stopping by with glowing reports of better health and real comfort. Some people have even .discovered the original, barefoot way of walking is fun. "I just want to thank you so very much for making my feet happy," wrote one Earth Shoes enthusiast. "They've complained ever since they were born, and today they smiled." Tcecqs Instruments nr ditj VVJiVJIVJLVl 2500 E e e e e $2. SO week $8.00month U 027.00rcst of spring $ ijii somostor Room 252, Suite C UNION Between 1 and 4 p.m. O 933-3902 of Student Services Commission a a- -is -it it S3 VI : i: 5: 11 :: :: At the Door $4.50 SON o n o I 1 ffl! tea beat J ill ' EALS f spssKcra C'oiii Etilntm. Soldi out. Tonight t 8 In Um lorfsl K;.H. Tldcets on mis tor $1 tt Unl in DqjJu Jirto Fonda. 4 p.m. Fridsy In t 8 mortal Hz'.L Tickets, SO cent svxllstls et Union dsk. CIncrna "Ash Wtinesdiy." CeroUna Th2tr. Liz C8ta a facS.fL TtrrlbU. 13. 32. 5:1 5. 7:C7 & 8. $2. Ends today. Lata shew: Frldjry and Saturday, Tht Ccii.'od." Sunday, Th Llan Vho Loved Cat Dancing" AH shows at 1 1 :1 S. "Housvi cl Seven Corpses." Varsity Theatre. Ends today. Another trashy horror film. 1,3, 5, 7 & 9. Late show: "Rosemary's Da by." Friday and Saturday at 11:15. $10. - "The Long Goodbye." Plaza I. Robert Altman's private eye film. One of the year's best. 2:33, 4:43, 6i3 & 9. $2. Ends today. . "The Piper Chase." Plaza II. Highly satisfying f.!m about law school that Is outstanding In its examination of a student teacher relationship. Good performances. A brilliant, truly great one from John Houseman. 2:45, 4:55, 7:C5 & 9:15. $2. Ends Thursday. Feb. 14. "Sleeper." Plaza HI. Woody Allan's latest comedy, sst 203 years in the future. Very funny, and though it lacks some of the delirious brilliance of "Sex," it la his smoothest, best-paced film. 3:30, 5:30, 7:30 & 9:33. $2. Ends Thursday, Feb. 14. Chapel Hill Film Friends: "Summerskin." A pervsrse study cf love and death from Leopold Torre Niisson and Beatriz Guido, the director and writer or End of Innocence. Friday et 9:33. Saturday at 11:30 In Carroll Hall. $1.50. Alternative Cinema: The Merchant of Four Seasons." A German film directed by Rianerwerner Faf binder, an exceptionally, gifted young talent. This Is a most unusual brilliantly original story of the decline and fall of a fruit peddler. Friday at 7, Saturday at 2, 4:20, 7 & 9:30 in Carroll Hall. Free Ricks: Friday, "Georgia, Georgia." Black film did not get very good reviews, but Diana Sands was a talented actress and should be worth seeing. Saturday, "Le Dcnheur." Film by Agnes Varda, considered a class of cool precision. Sunday, "The Effect of . Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds." Super Sunday, by subscription only. Very fine American film. A half-crazy woman and her two daughters. Good writing and direction, excellent acting. All films at 6:30 & 9 In the Great Hall. "When the People Awake, Chile 18721973." Sponsored by Bread & Roses. Sunday and Monday at 7:30 In 111 Murphey. Thursday, Feb. 14 at 11 a.m. In Carroll Hall. Admission free but donations requested. Theatre UNC Reader's Theatre In cooperation with the Carolina Union will present an adaptation of The Hotbit" by J.R. Tolkien. Today at 8 p.m. in Deep Jonah. Contact Lenses Lenses Fitted Duplicated John C. Southern, OptJcisn-jrr Sunglasses Prescriptions Filled Mon.-Fri. 9-5:30 OPEN Sat. 9-1:00 121 East FrsnKlin Chapel Hlfl ..eft p-.-j. - .-.j ' " i V r 1 . re i I I 7 r Carcl'a Ptaymskars presents "Shay," by Ami CcrcrmJra. Se!ectd from the Eusne O'fiiSil K-wnorfel Theatre. Directed by Tony CJordxna. Tuasdiy, Feb. 12 through Sunday, Feb. 17 at 8 p.m. In tht Playmakera Theatre. Sunday mc"r at 2:Z0. Season ticket holders may purchase tickets starting Monday, Feb. 4. CsnaraJ tickets e!ss bttfn Thursday, Feb. 7. Ratenn ttat tJckt ta," $2.50, may ba purchased In 132 Graham tlamw ial or at Ledbettar Flckards on FrankHn StretL "MIoi Julie," by August Strindberg. Featjrlnj Ctgdam Onat, Warren Hznsa and ICinda NarfletL Today at 4, Friday at 4 and 8. Froo tlcksta av&ilabla at the Lab Theatre Olftca. pedl performance Saturday at 4. Tickets available only through the Association of Women Students office In the Unicn. All performances In C5 Graham Heme rial. The Music Mart." Village Dinner Theatre, P,alei;h. Buffet at 7, curtain at 8:30. Can 787 7771 for reservations. Nightly except Monday. Ends Sunday. "Grease." Last In a series of "Broadway at Duks." Friday, Feb. 15 at 4 and 8:30 p.m. In Pago Auditorium, Duke. Tickets $5, $3 and $7 for ths evening show, $4 for the matinee. Available at Page Box Office. "Earth Song," a one-act musical play, will be presented by The Atlanta Workshop In Nonviolence Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Presbyterian Student Center and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. et the Community Church. Presented with the play will be "Medicine and War," a slide show describing the effects cf the wi r on the medical facilities In North end South Vietnam. The program Is sponsored by The Chapel Hill Peace Center. Admission Is free and refreshments will be served. Auditions for "Dylan," by Sydney Michaels. Laboratory Theatre production. Friday at 4 In 211 Graham Memorial. Saturday at 3 In 203 Graham Memorial. Directed by A. Aaron Witt Concerts Thursday Evening series. Tom Warburton, piano. Tonight at 8 in Hiil Hall. Free to the public. Kris Kristofferson and Waylon Jennings. Friday, February 15 at 8 p.m. in Dorton Arena, Raleigh. Reserved seat tickets, $5 and $3, available at all area Record Bars. Seals and Croft Sunday, Feb. 17 at 8 p.m. in Cameron Indoor Stadium, Duke. Tickets on sale st the Record Bar for $4.50 and $5.50. The Department of Music at Duke presents Michael Campbell, pianist, in a guest recital Sunday at 8:15 in the East Duke Music Room. Admission is free. John Ogdon, British pianist, will appear with the North Carolina Symphony on Friday, .Feb. 15 at 8:15 p.m. In Memorial Hail. Admission free to UNC students. Nightlife Town -Hall. Tonight, Weeds. Friday and Saturday, Mike Greer. Cat's Cradle. Tonight, Biuegrass Experience. Friday and Saturday, Roger Salloom, country music from Nashville. Dianne Gooch, Carol Ponder and Bruce Wolff will present a variety of ballads, folk songs and popular music in connection with th9.V'-3n',?nVFe!i!'l.- Saturday from 8 to 11 Li-Ji eaJ.tr WJ Ui.r.f.1..- Ad..ission fres. CELLAR DOOR The Undergraduate Magazine is now accepting manuscripts until March 1. Guidelines are available at Union Desk. Interviews for staff positions and Editor also being held. MON-FRI 4 to 5:30 p.m. SIGN UP AT UNION DESK Is JJJSL.UliHJi .sS'lL ISl'MIi IMA "U Lll-fl. L !' " ".ami."!!! JWjJ-S.:, O Gonuino African Trading Beads O Benin Bronze Ear Rings of Distinction O Jungle Fever Incense 50 0 a pack O Thumb Organs O Wood Carvings frican BatiEt: Shop FJCFJD Plaza Open 10-8 Chapol Hill 942-2322 i V - rir4 Arroz Con Polio Mtzy salad & tea r 'S
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 7, 1974, edition 1
4
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