Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 25, 1975, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, Seplsmbtr 5, 1375 Ths Dilsy Tir K;:I 3 p Campus Calendar Today's Activities Donl mlu the Grand Balloon Match. Individual singles Urt at 8:30 p.m. In the James 5th floor (ounce. Get In on the ports event of the season! Community I will meet at 6 p.m. for dinner and fellowship discussion at the Presbyterian Center. All new members are welcome. , The Circle K Club will meet at 7 p.m. In Room 209 of the Union. Topics of discussion will be election of officers and club activities at Murdoch Center. The Young Democrat will meet at 8 p.m. In the Union. The proposed state Young Democrat! platform will be discussed, along with final plans for the rally and Pfg PlcklrV, Oct. 4. The Brothers of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity will sponsor a M.I.N.K. (Men interested In Kappa) Interest group meeting at 9 p.m. In Room 209 of the Union. Interested persons are encouraged to attend this Informational gathering. The UNC Collegiate 4-H Club will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in the South Lounge Meeting Room of the Union. Thursday Worship continues at the Battle House at 6 p.m. with Chaplain Joe Ciontz serving as leader. The topic, "Clues to a Christian Life Style," will continue to be the focus. Recreation precedes at 5 p.m. There will be a meeting for all sophomore students interested In applying to the School of Nursing for 1976 at 7 p.m. today In Room 15 of Carrington. The first class session for the English Conversation Class for International Wives will be held from 10 to 12 a.m. at the home of Mrs. Harrle Chamberlln, 1001 Arrowhead Road (near Glen Lennox). A nursery for pre-school children will be provided. There is no charge for this class, which meets weekly and Is conducted by volunteers. Any questions may be directed to Mrs. Donald Hay man (967-3381) or to the Office of Advisers to International Students (933-5661). Upcoming Events The Chapel Hill Soccer dub will play the Orange Soccer Club at 2 p.m. Sunday on the astroturt. Spectators art welcome. The new Bayit Is coming: Jewish students living In a communal life style while exploring their Jewishness. Interested? Go talk It over Friday after dinner and services at the Hlllel. Fore more Information, call David Lehrer at 933 4685. South Wing will provide music for a dance from 9 until 1 o'clock Friday night at the Grad Center at Duke. $2 and all the beer you can drink. Sponsored by the Duke Gay Alliance. UNC Club Football win host Davidson at 8 p.m. Friday on the astroturt. Free. A Gospel Singing Bluegrass Festival featuring the Lewis Family wlil be held at 8 p.m. Friday In Memorial Hall. Tickets $3 adults, $2 children will be available at the door. Proceeds will go to the Carrboro Volunteer Fire Department Recreation Fund. Items of Interest The Student Health Service has a limited supply of. flu vaccine free of charge to students. The Communicable Disease Center in Atlanta does not expect a major flu epidemic this year. However, it Is strongly advised that students with chronic Illnesses such as diabetes, asthma, bronchitis and other lung diseases, or heart or kidney disease, take the flu vaccine every year. Do you: want to be a part of a humanitarian cause? want to help a high school student achieve? want to Impart while you learn and before you embark? Then, get Involved In the Upward Bound tutoring program. For details, call 933-1281 or 933-1282 or go by 201 Vance Hail. They need youl Lost: Kappa Alpha fraternity pin. Call Connie Kearney at 942-1142. IT If G HI I A Large Selection of ill TDHDIPAI Dl AMTO f3 -V "hanging '$ 1 y BASKETS lust reennouse o Can ilu H diss Handcrafted CANDLES Hanging & Sand Candles in a wide range of sizes Located on Yellow Drive West at intersection of Route 220 & Route 705 and follow signs. Phone OPEN 9-5 Mon.-Sat. 1:30-4:30 Sunday oeagrOVe, jJ.l. '.I t . '. " , ti .X . . I -l -s -lav Su James Tobaccos pipe J tobacco Our own cool, light mildly aro matic blend that recalls the morning mist rising from the meadows. Six fine cavendishes blended in our exacting ratio exclusively for you by the gentle men at Saint James. Stop in and try a free pipe full lltfe Frahkiin Street 967-8760 AT OUR SPECIAL LOCATION WE'VE CONSOLIDATED OUR EXCESS YEAR ROUND MENSWEAR FROM ALL OUR HUB STORES IN N.C. ... FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON FAMOUS NAME BRANDS FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY: SPECIAL LOCATIO IN THE NCNB PLAZA ON FRANKLIN ST. DOWNTOWN CHAPEL HILL OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-7 NCNB PLAZA I I NCNB BANK FRANKLIN ST. SUITS REG. TO $200 SF TCOAT VALUES TO $180 Vy) lyl UP s $3)2)AND S LAC ICS REG. TO $42.50... P u AND AND UP LEISURE SUITS wow 2PR,CE SWEATERS CREWS' v-neck &qj99 TURTLENECKS SHORT SLEEVE $50 DRESS SHIRTS CARDIGAN SWEATERS SHORT SLEEVE KIM IT SHIRTS AND UP LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS AND UP A GROUP OF SLEEVELESS SWEATERS PECIAL imiitu SALE SPECIAL LOCATION IN NCNB PLAZA, FRANKLIN ST., DOWNTOWN, CHAPEL HILL OPEN MOW. THRU SAT. 10 TIL 7 USE YOUR BANK CARD from the wires of United Press International Nix on asked, ordered to tesiiry WASHINGTON The Senate intelligence committee agreed Wednesday to ask Richard M. Nixon to testify about intelligence community abuses after a member charged the former president with an "enormous, unrestricted, paranoid fear about the American people." Almost simultaneously, U.S. District Judge Lewis Smith ruled that Nixon must submit to sworn depositions in connection with a damage suit filed against him and other White House officials, charging illegal wiretapping. Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, chairman of the Select Committee on Intelligence, said the panel in closed session had voted to question Nixon on the so-called Huston surveillance plan "and a number of other matters." The committee revealed Wednesday that for 20 years prominent Americans including Nixon and Nobel Peace Prize winners Linus Pauling and Martin Luther King Jr. had their mail illegally opened and photographed by the CIA. Church, who disclosed the program, said, letters to and from such senators as Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and himself also were scrutinized. " Church said the interept snared one letter addressed to Nixon inlune 1968, while he was campaigning for th presidency he won that November. Two years later, Nion approved, then revoked, a mail itercept program, according to evidence tus far made public without knowing it alredy was in existence. I Judge Smith ruled tht Nixon must give sworn depositions at s San Clemente, Calif., home or at some riarby location. The testimony is sought by frmer White House national security stifer Morton H. Halerpin, who is suing xon, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and other White House officials for all?edly tapping his home telephone from 159 to 1972. . -? X Mrs. Ford commers on attempts WASHINGTON Frst lady Betty Ford said Wednesday she wats her husband to continue traveling but ishes he would be more cautious and "justitay away from the people." jj Meanwhile, a WhifcHouse spokesman said Wednesday Present Ford took the advice of Secret Service agents who told him he should not shake hands with crowds outside the San Francisco hotel just before a woman fired a gun from across the street. The decision may have saved Ford's life, said Press Secretary Ron Nessen. Nessen said that as Ford was walking out of the St. Francis Hotel Monday, Secret Service agents made a spur-of-the-moment request that he not shake hands with crowds outside the hotel. Ford "always" takes such on-the-spot advice from his guards, Nessen said. Sara Jane Moore, 45, was standing in a crowd across the street, and Nessen said she was part of "one of the crowds the Secret Service suggested the President might well pass up." During a briefing with a delegation of the Women's Stock Broker Association, Mrs. Ford said that "perhaps there should be some curtailment" of her husband's handshaking and closeness to crowds in view of the second assassination attempt against him in California. "Of course I want him to travel," she told reporters. "No, I don't think he's in danger." She was asked if she had discussed with President Ford the harrowing episode of Monday. "Well, of course I've talked to him about it," she said. "I'm his wife." Asked exactly what she had advised him, she replied: "Just stay away from the people keep going." OPEC to raise oil prices VIENNA, Austria Leading oil producers agreed Wednesday to raise oil prices Oct. U but most of them said it would be a "modest" hike that would keep world inflation from soaring out of control. Iranian Minister Jamshid Amouzegar told reporters after a five-hour meeting of oil ministers of the I3-nation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) that they hoped to reach a decision on the exact size of the increase today. Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the Saudi Arabian oil minister, said there were sharp differences of opinion over the size of the increase. "The differences are greater than I expected," said Yamani. who went into the meeting publicly favoring a continuation of the oil price freeze that OPEC agreed upon nine months ago. i n a LfDSlDCrQg) I A o o number" p JSr jf ' John Doe ' 'Si ytiis u nurse today tihe i fiElillS M 0 Just about every piece of Nereo equipment at the new Vickers Audio will have a 5-digit number posted on o If that number matches thefirst 5-digits of your social security number, you win that piece absolutely FREE Vickers AuO reserves the right to verify ail winning numbers. And while yai're there check out these prices! Technic RecBivBi'i by Panasonc 25 ofi 27 SO minuto Capita! Cascottos for both Quantities Limitod -i Ci&L SECURBTV G1WE-A IFJA V TIURSDAY & FRIDAY NITt TIL 9 PAA SATURDAY 'TIL 6 PM THIS WEEK ONLY 210 W. Franklin Street (Between Fowler's and Belk's) r i ..I 929-4554
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 25, 1975, edition 1
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