2 Ths Daily Tar Hssl Thursday, December 4, 1375
Gam
Today's Activities
The Carolina Indian Circle will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday in the South Gallery
Meeting Room in the Union.
The Student Academic Affairs Committee
will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday. All three
subcommittees are asked to attend. Location
may be checked at the Union desk.
ECOS will hold a general business
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Room 217
of the Union. Environmental action in
Chapel Hill will be discussed. The meeting
will be open to the public.
Prof. Shaler Stidham Jr. of the
Department of Industrial Engineering at
North Carolina State University will talk on
"Optimal Control of Queueing Systems: An
Updated Survey' at 4 p.m. Thursday in 265
Phillips. A coffee hour will precede the
occasion, beginning at 3:30 in Room 102,
Phillips Annex.
A talk on maternity practice, "Who
Speaks for the FamilyT, will be given by Peg
flack Mountain
ilver Gxnpany
Handwrought Sterling
Silver & Gold Jewelry
967-8101
25 discount
HOLIDAY HOURS with student I.D.
Mon.-Fr.
10-7 - 504 West Franklin. Upstairs
Sat. 10-5 Chapel Hill. North Carolina
Sun. 1-5
RJdD flH23(Q..
iundleimti
Minn
MCE
mmm
Seinmesteir Hease
snow awaMalbEe.
Dis
play
or By Appointment.
11 P0li
pus Calendar
Beals, R.N., at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Orange
Savings and Loan, corner of Rosemary and
Columbia streets. Sponsored by the
National Association of Parents &
Professionals for Safe Alternatives in
Childbirth, a 50c donation would be
appreciated. -
The UNC Scuba Club will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday in Room 303 of Woollen Gym. A
slide show on diving will be presented.
The Carolyceum Needlepoint Class will
meet at 7:30 p.m. in 225 Greenlaw. Blocking
will be discussed. If you cannot attend,
please call Kathi at 933-492 1 .
The Campus Crusade for Christ will have
a Christmas party at 7 p.m. in 301 Dey Hall.
Vermont C. Royster, Kenan Professor of
journalism and former editor of the Wall
Street Journal, will speak on the American
Presidency at a special meeting of the
Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary
Societies at 8 p.m. in the Dialectic chambers
on the third floor of New West.
Upcoming Events
A Christmas party and dance will be
sponsored by the Carolina Gay Association
at 9 p.m. Friday in the Craige Dorm
Recreation Room. Everyone is invited.
Willie Koch Day The friends of Dr.
William J. Koch are invited to a fun-filled
morning to celebrate the joy of knowing
Willie. Group 1 of Botany 10 encourages
every one to join in the music, games, gifts,
food, excitement, sex and surprises.
Two friends of Koch, Director of
Financial Aid Bill Geer and Political Science
instructor Ed Azar, will give speeches in the
JEAW TOPPERS!
Long-sleeved, printed, knit tee shirts.
Many to choose from!
ALSO JEANS
pre-washed, cord, and brushed denim
by H.I.S., LEVI, and WRANGLER.
University Mall
Sunday 1 -6
Spec!
mill from
l CLOTHIERS, Inct I J
all ftSiSJJi: Ml
9 2 mill, from
South Sq. Shopping Center
5 min. from Duke
3 Swimming Pools
9 2 Recreation Rooms
24 hr. Security
Professionally lighted
Tennis Courts
1, 29&3 Bedrooms
Furnished &l Unfurnished
Apartments Open
iffftfiim'gn
M
Pit on the occasion. For music.
Homecoming Queen Delmar Williams will
do the William Tell Overture with his head.
A vegetable Olympic will be held also,
featuring a cabbage put and an onion eating
contest.
A free introductory lecture on
Transcendental Meditation will be given at 7
p.m. Monday (Dec. 8) in Room 217 of the
Union.
The annual Christmas bazaar of the
University United Methodist Church will be
held from 1 1 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.
Needlework, Christmas decorations, plants,
foods, jewelry, aprons, candy, children's
clothes, ceramics and white elephants will be-.,
on display. Lunch will be served and a
nursery will be provided.
A program of new music by students in
composition will be presented as a free
public concert at 4 p.m. Sunday in the Hill
Rehearsal Hall. The program will consist of
instrumental solos, duos, trios, vocal pieces
and an electronic tape composition.
Chapel Hill Recreation Department
Outdoor Program
Botanical Gardens Children's Hike:
Thursday from 10-11:30 a.m. at the
Botanical Gardens Green House. Open to
pre-schoolers and parents at no charge.
Christmas Evergreen Workshop:
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Botanical
Gardens Green House. Open to the public at
the cost of $4 per person to cover instruction
and materials.
Items of Interest
Toronto Exchange Members can pick up
Canadian address information at the Union
desk now.
A Moravian Lovefeast and Christmas
Candlelight Service will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday at the Wesley Foundation on
Pittsboro Street. Everyone is welcome.
Next week will be the last week of the
Women's Health Clinic at the Student
Health Service before the holidays. There
will be no discussion group on Dec. 16 and
no clinic on Dec. 18.
SCAU is looking for a bicycle repair
expert to assist in research for their bike
repair booklet. The amount of time required
for this position will be minimal. Call 933
8313 for further information. "
The east parking lot of the Union has been
reserved for the weekend of Dec. 5, 6 and 7
by the YM-YWCA. -The Appalachian
7
ays a Week
WHITER SPECIAL:
2-BEDROOAA
FURNISHED APARTMENT
ONLY
PER MONTH
1 Sdwmtilln
sfi cncn
craftsmen will be using the parking lot that
weekend.
Anyone interested in serv ing on the Media
Board please pick up an application at the
Union desk before Dec. 12. John Hanfordat
968-9068 will answer any questions on what
the position involves.
Any students who wants his her English I
or 2 folder from Fall semester 1974 should
sign up in Greenlaw 200 or call 933-5481
sometime this week.
The International Handicrafts Bazaar
needs people to work a couple of hours in
sales, security, decoration and as
entertainers and waiters in the international
coffeehouse the weekend of Dec. 5-7. To sign
up or find out more about the Bazaar go by
the campus Y.
The federal Summer Employment
Examination will be given only in January
and February. The January date is strongly
recommended. The deadline for applying to
take this test is Friday, Dec. 12. Mailing
forms and more information are available at
Career Planning and Placement, 21 1 Hanes
Hall.
All International Students please go by
and sign up as a waitress for the coffeehouse
the Association of International Students is
sponsoring during the International
Handicrafts Bazaar this weekend. Anyone
who wishes to entertain call Anne Marie
Rompalske at 933-6278.
The Guidance and Testing Center will be
closed on Monday evenings until next year,
but will be open regular office hours (8 a.m.
to 5 p.m.) Monday through Friday except
for University holidays of Dec. 24-26 and
New Year's Day.
A mountain-style chicken bar-B-Q will be
sponsored by and for the benefit of
Neighborhood House this Saturday from 2
to 4 p.m. at the corner of Church and Carr
streets.
Lost: A sterling silver spoon ring and
braided leather bracelet; much sentimental
value.- Reward offered. Call Missy at 929
8003. RA applications
available Friday
Applications for resident assistant (RA)
and assistant resident director positions w ill
be available this Friday, Assistant Housing
Director Sandi Ward said Wednesday.
Campus residents (all except freshmen)
with a 2.5 grade point average or better are
eligible for the positions.
RA's work an average of 17 hours per
week and are paid S2.50 per hour for
counseling, representing the housing
department and the University in policy
matters and aiding dorm governments. They
occupy single rooms and pay $288 semester
for room rent.
Ward called the selection for R A positions
"pretty , competitive. We had about 500
applications-for 80 positions last year.'' She
this year. ;
Further information and applications are
available from current RA's for on-campus
students and at the Carr Building housing
office for off-campus students.
Primitive things ...
Quilts Trunks
r
iocks ana more
... malte great gifts
at real old
fashioned prices
Cottage
Antiques
M-F-Sot.
10:30-5:00 E- Min Street
or coll 967-2806 Carrboro
Is someone on your list a
Pipe Smoker?
See tfw gentlemen at St. James early for an excellent selection of
fine pipes, pipe tobaccos and smoking accessories (not to
mention fine coffees and teas).
Merry Christmas
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,iitK BnLnrt Omir C-ilrl
with Baked Potato, Salad &
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'Good thru December '75 T"H
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12. 6 oz. CHOPPED STEAK 990
with Baked Potato & Texas Toast with coupon
. I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I. qHhru December '75, 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 , I , I , I , I I , I
t
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I I I
'I'll i-nni-mru'
8. SHRIMP PLATTER $199
with your choice of Baked Potato or French Fries; Salad & Texas Toast a
Hi I I I I I I I TGoodthru December '75 I I I I I I I i T T
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for the price of
Through the open door of a Chapel Hill
a way that is not usually seen.
Chancellor's
still learning
by Laura Seism
Staff Writer
The. Order of the Tar Heel 100, an
advisory group to the chancellor, is still
familiarizing its members with. University
programs and goals after being chartered by
the UNC Board of Trustees in October,
1974.
The committee serves as a liaison between
the people of the state and the University,
UNC Vice Chancellor William F. Little said.
Its members tell the chancellor how North
Carolinians feel about the University and
explain the University's goals and programs
to the people.
For example, after discussing admissions
problems with UNC Director of
Undergraduate Admissions Richard
Cashwell, committee members explained
University admissions policy to people they
knew. Little said.
- Other issues and problems facing the-'
University concerning the committee include:?
the utilities sale, a possible - women s
gymnasium, plans for a new library, student
aid and a continuing education center,
committee Vice Chairperson Sibyl Powe of
Durham said.
Although committee members make
suggestions to Chancellor N. Ferebee Taylor
and the Board of Trustees in these areas, the
Tar Heel 100 is strictly an advisory body,
Little said.
But while the Tar Heel 100 is not an
official lobbying group, once its members
become aware of the U niversity's needs, they
work to meet those needs, Powe said.
"Natural lobbying" is conducted through
social contacts, Powe said. She explained
that if she eats dinner with her neighbor, a
state legislator, "naturally I talk to him
about the needs of the University."
But any such lobbying is strictly in
individual matter, Powe noted. "The
-
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117 E. Franklin Street 967-3960
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Staff photo by Charles Hardy
car wash, familiar landmarks are reflected in
advisory group
about University
committee was never meant to be a pressure
group." she said.
The Tar Heel 100 is not a fund-raising
organization either. Little said, even though
many committee members have helped the
University raise money through other
organizations, such as the Medical
Foundation, the Business Foundation and
the Alumni Association.
But if the need arises, individual
committee members may help raise money,
although not as members of the Tar Heel
100, Little said.
Little said the Tar Heel 100. also called the
Committee of the Tar Heel 100. is still
planning its programs and deciding how to
accomplish its goals. So far, meetings have
been designed to familiarize members with
the University's strengths and needs, he said.
Committee members, elected for. three
year terms by t he Board of Trustees upon the
Chancellor's' recommendation. -Vre close
Ktrif nds Tl fi
.U
mvers.ii
'VrV in.
contact with the people of the state." Little
said. "They are people the U niversity can call
on for their time."
The Tar Heel 100 group is divided, into
smaller committees, which are concerned
with communications, financial assistance
and the University's goals and programs,
study problems or in-depth needs. These
committees suggest ways in which the
University could better serve the state,
Hanes said.
Most of the 100 committee members are
University alumni, but the Tar Heel 100 is
not another alumni organization. Little said.
"It should complement the Alumni
Association, but it certainly is not a
substitute which has chapters and meetings
throughout the state," he said.
Frank Borden Hanes, chairperson of the
Tar Heel 100's committee or- arts and
sciences, said in a telephone interview that
the group seeks to increase support for the
University among state citizens and also to
make people more aware of the University
and its needs.
The Daily Tar Heel is published by the Univeraity o
North Carolina Media Board; daily except Sunday,
exam periods, vacations, and summer sessions. The
following dates are to be the only Saturday Issues:
Sept. 6, 20; Oct 1, 8; Nov. 11, 25.
Offices are at the Student Union Building, University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. N.C 27514.
Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-0245. 933
0246; Business, Circulation, Advertising 933
1163. Subscription rates: $25 per year, $12.50 per
semester.
Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in
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
Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution).
The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the
typographical tone of all advertisements and to
revise or turn away copy it considers objectionable.
The Daily Tar Heel will not consider adjustments or
payments for any typographical errors or erroneous
insertion unless notice Is given to the Business
Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement
appears, within (1) day f the receiving of the tear
sheets or subscription o 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.
Reynolds G. Bailey
Elizabeth F. Bailey
Business Mgr.
.Advertising Mgr.
CHECK
THE
DTH
CLASSIFIE
DS
I