Tht Dally Tar Heel Friday, Feb. 14. 1975 Campus Calendar e WAVMV.W :3 Today's Activities AU arc Invited to dinner at 6 and worship at tonight, the Hillel Foundation. Call 942-4057 by noon lor reservation. A Valentine's Day square dance will be sponsored by the University Women's Club Newcomers at tonight, the Community Church. Tickets, $1.50 par parson. Light refreshments and soft drinks wHI be served. Coma to "discotheque Dana," 10 tonight at Morrison's large social lounge. Free! Food, drink and fun! Gala night sponsored by KO chapter of Deri Sigma Theta Sorortty, inc. Campus Chest flicks 7 and 9 tonight In CarroB, including Laurel and Hardy, Charlie Chaplin, the Mara Brothers, W.C. Fields. Admission te $1. Dr. Howard Schneider, director of the Institute of Nutrition, win discuss the world food situation, 530 tonight at Dr. Seymour Halleck's home. Rides leave the Y Building between 5 and 5:15. Sign up in the Y office. Items of Interest ! . . Volunteers! Help paint ECOS collection boxes Saturday. Call 929-9273 for rides or directions. Recyclers: remember to check schedule at ECOS office. Teague Dorm wSi have a Victory Party 9 pjn. Saturday In the basement social room. Free. Good music and bear. i I Musid dl Cappetla della Collins w perform English' Baroque works S pjn. Saturday In 400 New East. The Dt-Phf Societies Invite the public. "The Throw-Away Ethic," an educational conference to. discuss the proposed legislation for minimum deposit on beverage containers, 10 S-m. to 4 pjn. Saturday, Room 229 Social Sciences, Duke University. Volunteers are needed for the United Jewish Appeal mailing 330 pjn. Sunday, the Hiliel Foundation. Call 942 4057 or 929-8894 for more Info. The Chapel Hlil Health Coalition win meet 4 p.m. Sunday, 2nd floor lounge of the School of Public Health. Anyone interested in local health issues and consumer-oriented action Is invited. Wesley Foundation worship 1 1 a.m. Sunday; Lucy Austin Is preaching. Pot luck lunch following. If you can't bring a dish, bring a dollar. Wesley Foundation Graduate Group win meet 4 to I p-m. Sunday In the Wesley Foundation upper lounge for Dr. Joy Kasaon's slide presentation, "Utopian Themes In American Art." Los and bagel brunch for professors, graduate and professional students 1130 am. to 130 p.m. Sunday, the HJBel Foundation. Tickets for the Playmakers production, The Miracle Workers," are now on sale, $Z50- Play wia run Feb. 20-23 and Feb. 27-March 2. The Order of the Valkyries is now accepting nominations of Junior and senior women whose contributions to University, life have been outstanding. Non-student women may be nominated H they have contributed to the University community. Nomination forms, available at the Union desk, are due by Feb. 28. H you are Interested In applying for scholarships, grants, loans or work-study and have not received a 1975-76 Student Aid Application, pick one up at the Student Aid Office, 300 Vance. Students may also apply for 1975 PACEVfulttime work-study in their home counties by picking up forms at the Aid Office. An student aid forms are due March 1. News briefs . Tamer Tballotts out soon Carrboro bus vote pushed by George Bacso Staff Writer A vast majority of Carrboro residents favor the holding of a new public transportation referendum, a survey coordinated by members of the UNC Biostatistics Department shows. Harriet Imrey, Carrboro Public Transportation Commission chairman, was to present the results of the survey to the Carrboro Board of Aldermen Tuesday night in an effort to schedule a referendum this spring before students leave town for the summer. For the first time in Mayor Robert Wells' four years in office, however, the board failed to reach a quorum as only half its members showed up. The survey results will thus be presented Monday night at a special board meeting. A referendum to establish a bus system was narrowly defeated in May, 1973, but the election was held after many students already had left school. The study also shows that Carrboro's population has changed significantly.since then. The survey estimates 87.5 per cent of all Carrboro residents favor the holding of such a referendum and indicates whether the resident is affiliated with UNC as a student, faculty or staff member made little difference in his support of public transportation. Ninety-three per cent of all UNC students and 83 per cent of all UNC faculty and personnel residing in Carrboro want a referendum called, whereas 83 per cent of all other residents favor a referendum. Race and type of residence also made slight differences in an individual's response: 87 per cent of whites favor having a referendum, as do 82 per cent of black respondents. Although apartment dwellers are strongly in favor of public transportation with 93 per cent, the corresponding percentage among residents living in single family homes is 78 per cent. Calling the study multi-faceted, study coordinator Dr. Mildred Francis said it revealed several recent changes in Carrboro's population. The survey found that UNC faculty and staff members comprise 17 per cent of Carrboro's total population; students, 42 per cent; and others, 40 per cent. Carrboro's population has almost doubled since the May 1973 referencum was defeated, the survey found. Of all eligible Carrboro voters, only 36 per cent are registered to vote: Of these, 76 per cent are in favor of holding a referendum. In addition, 74 per cent of those persons not currently registered indicated that the possibility of being able to vote on a public transportation referendum would persuade them to register immediately. Imrey warned that the board must take swift action in applying for a referendum if they decide to do so. State statutes require that a town wait at least 50 days after calling a special election for the actual election date. Imrey said the town must move quickly so the election can be held before students go home for the summer. Each year the University presents eight awards to fulltime members of its faculty for excellence in undergraduate teaching. The Tanner Awards and the AMOCO Foundation Good Teaching Awards carry stipends of SI 000 each. The Nicolas Salgo Distinguished Teacher Award carries a prize of $1500. Dr. Joel J. Schwartz, chairman of the Student-Faculty Committee on Distinguished Teaching Awards, said Wednesday he hopes for a large expression of student opinion. "We will write letters to all professors who get a substantial number of ballots," he said, "just to let them know some of their students care." Nominating ballots for the eight University distinguished teaching awards will be available starting Monday through March 3. Nominations for the teaching awards can be made by any undergraduate student and any full-time faculty member. Ballots will be available in the following locations: the undergraduate library, the Union, Chase Cafeteria, the YMCA, the Health Sciences Library and South Building information desk. License plate deadline soon Midnight Monday is the deadline for getting 1975 North Carolina license plates for your car. After that, motorists with 1974 plates face a maximum $50 fine. In Orange County, plates may be picked up at the Triangle Tire Company, on W. Main Street in Carrboro. The license fee this year is $14, plus a $1 city tax, and must be paid in cash. Valentine's Day parade is today Kids of all ages drag out your Valentine costumes, drape streamers on your 10 speeds and boogie down to Franklin Street today. It's the 4th annual Chi Psi Valentine's Day Parade. The parade will congregate by Silent Sam at 3:45 p.m. The Kalamazoo Kazoo Band will usher all cupids down Franklin Street, up Mallette Street and into the Chi Psi Lodge for a Valentine bash. Nothing is worse than soggie Valentine's costumes, so if it rains the parade will be Saturday at 1 1 a.m. Chaplain to be installed today The Rev. Thomas B. Woodard will be installed as the UNC Episcopal chaplain at noon today during a service and ceremony in the Pit. The Rt. Rev. Moultrie Moore, suffragan bishop of North Carolina, will lead the service, aided by UNC students, faculty members and chaplains. '-. ' - - -, - - , m 1 Mon.-Sat. 10-7 163 E. Franklin St 968-4408 7 t i k " WLUlLI lj ( i V( 0 In im A native of Kansas. Woodard previously served as a chaplain at the University of Rochester, Central Missouri State University and the University of Kansas. Diagnosis really only six weeks The waiting period for diagnosis of gonorrhea is six weeks, not six months as reported in a Wednesday article on rape. Yack buyers may win big Anyone who purchases a Yackety Yack before 5 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 21, will be eligible to win a student section ticket to the N.C. State basketball game in Carmichael Auditorium on Feb. 25. Yackety Yacks, $8, may be purchased from 1-5 p.m. weekdays in Suite D of the Union. The winner will be announced at 5 p.m., Feb. 21. Lake to open at noon Sunday University Lake will open for boating on Sunday this year, instead of the usual March 1 opening date. Lake Warden Lester Foley said Thursday that rentals will start at noon Sunday. Hours for the lake are: Tuesday through Saturday, 8:00 a.m. to sundown; Sunday, noon to sundown; and Monday, closed. WATCH the' CLASSIFIEDS ( craft ) J supplies I ., ulinii JBSjw. I" nnr n i - i a BELT BLANKS , BUCKLES-BUCKLES SUCKLES . ' -i- - CRAFTO0l.se . S) OAK SHOULDERS LATIGO SIDES HARNESS LEATHER DEERTAN COWHIDE STRAPS-SKINS-SCRAPS ZACK WHITE LEATHER RETAIL - WHOLESALE 2005 Wake Forest Rd. RALEIGH 832-7337 Mon.-Fri 8 a.m. -5 p.m. Sat. 9 m.-1 Textbook Closeouts! Were an arm and a leg, now only $1.95 each Fresh, new copies of older titles, sciences and humanities. (In this sale, our humanity is a science!) Limited stock, great low prices! Come and get 'em! University Mall and Downtown, Chapel Hill open every day and night The Dally Tar Heel la published by the University of North Carolina Media Board; dally except Swjday. exam perloda, vacation, and summer perlode. No Sunday laeue. The following dale are to rV",y Shjrd' ue: September 14. October 5 & 19, and November 2, 16 & 23. Office are at the Student Union buldling. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hlil, N.C. 27514. Telephone number: News, Sport 933 1011, 933-1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1163. Subscription rate: $20.00 per year; $10.00 per semester. ,SC?d,.?l" Potag paid at U.S. Port Office m Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. The Campus Governing Council shall have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate all revenue derived from the Student Acttvttiee Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student ConaBhrttoo). The Dalfy Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revlee or turn away copy ttccldersooKcttonable. The Dally Tar Heel wtii not consider adjustments prepayment for any typographical errors or erroneous Insertion unless notice is given to the Business Manager within (1) one day after the advertiaement appears, with (1) one day of the receiving of the tear sheets or subscription of the paper. The Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible for more than one Incorrect Insertion of an advertisement scheduled to run several times. Notice for such correction must be given before the next Insertion. . Business Mgr. . Elizabeth F. Bailey.. .-Adv. Manager Reynolds Q. Bailey..

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