Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 12, 1976, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 The Dally Tar Hael Monday, January 12, 1S7S .WWWWMW.V e-3 I SHOP WITH 77 ADVERTISERS v. V.V.V.V.V.V.W.VA CALL US. YMCA CLASSES START SOONT BELLY DANCING lunch hours evenings ' Tuesday or Thursday. YOGA 2 rughtsweek CHINESE COOKING Mondays at 7 p.m. ' GUITAR 2 nightsweek WOMEN'S PHYSICAL FITNESS 2 nightsweek and 10 others 929-8104 Continued from page 1 earthquake," he said. Richter units increase logarithmically. Thus, a 7.0 earthquake would be 10 times more severe than a 6.0 quake. Stewart said that a 8.0 magnitude earthquake would cause severe damage within a 50-80 mi. radius, with significant damage extending 150 miles from the center of the quake; tremors from the quake would be felt in Canada, Cuba, and Kansas. ; In the Wilmington area, Stewart said, every building would be damaged and low lying areas would be flooded. Hundreds of deaths probably not over 200 and about 10,000 injuries would occur. He said severe pollution from several Wilmington chemical plants and a dynamite plant, none of which were built to withstand Color Pen IPtcfenn Pen V BlulbnriMtfeMiPt A J Refilba f& Writes Green Blue Red Kack ( t 5? tl 7Du tf 1 s ;.jr iV" fc "w ?. I 3 available at n 1976 Tax Lister's Schedules for Orange County CHAPEL HILL TOWNSHIP: L R. Cheek, Lister The listing will take place at the Carrboro Town Hall each Monday through Friday, 9:00 am to 5:00 pm; and Saturdays, 9:00 am -1 2:00, beginning January 2, 1 976 and continuing throughoutxthe month of January. BINGHAM TOWNSHIP: Eve,Yn Teer- Lster : . t- (Mrs. Thomas Y. Teer) January 9 Wade Store 9:00 am - 5:00 pm January 10 Hardin Johnson's 9:00 am - 4:00 pm January 13 Home 9:00 am - 5:00 pm January 16 Orange Grove 9:00 am - 5:00 pm January 17.... Orange Grove .9:00 am - 4:00 pm January 20 Home 9:00 am - 5:00 pm January 23 Allen Service Station 9:00 am - 5:00 pm January 24 Alien Service Station 9:00 am - 4:00 pm January 27.... Home.... ..' 9:00 am-5:00 pm January 30 ... . Talbert's Service St ...... 9:00 am - 5:00 pm January 31 Talbert's Service St ......9:00 am - 4:00 pm LATE LIST PENALTY 10 of total tax due will be added to all lists filed after January 31 . All persons owning ten or more acres of land must f ile a Farm Census Report. Persons 65 years of age or over, and permanently disabled persons who wish to apply for the $5000 Homestead Exemption must complete application for found on tax abstract and form AV-9 available at the tax office or from the tax lister. This application must be re-executed each year to requalify. Orange County Tax Supervisor W. T. (Bill) Laws earthauakes. would occur. In areas over 100 miles from the quake center, Stewart said, buildings with weak masonries would be damaged and chimneys might fall off of buildings. Chapel Hillians would see these effects and hear dishes rattling in cabinets, he said. The Greensboro Daily News reported Sunday that Wilmington Mayor Ben Halterman laughed at the prediction and 3 said such disasters could not be prepared for. Dr. Roy L. Ingram, chairman of the UNC geology department, said Sunday that Bernhardt is "getting a lot of publicity she doesn't deserve. He said although Stewart's scientific evidence warrants further investigation, any precautions based on the psychic's prediction would be foolish, Bernhardt, who calls herself a student of metaphysics and an earthquake prediction specialist, announced Nov. 26, 1974, that a minor quake would occur in the central coastal area of California at 3 p.m. Nov. 28. Her prediction proved true except for the time, which was off by one minute. The March 25, 1975 National Enquirer printed Bernhardt's predictions of earthquakes in the Southern Hemisphere on May 25, 1975, and the Northern Hemisphere Delicious! THE NEW 77 on Nov. 29, 1975. The quake predicted for the. Southern Hemisphere occured instead in the Northern Hemisphere, at 2 a.m. May 26. Stewart, who has spent two years investigating the possibility of an earthquake in Wilmington, read of Bernhardt's second and third successful predictions in the National Enquirer and called her last Dec. 1 to invite her to North Carolina. On Jan. 4, Bernhardt and Stewart flew by private plane over parts of Georgia and the Carolinas. During the flight Bernhardt "felt something pulling" over one of the few documented faults in the Southeast. Stewart said he did not realize they were over the fault until the pilot logged their position on the map. It was on Tuesday, after a drive through Wilmington and a visit to the Brunswick plant (requested by Bernhardt) on Monday, that Bernhardt made her prediction. Stewart said he found the first scientific indications of a possible earthquake in Wilmington in Jan. 1974, when he discovered a report by the National Geodesic Survey which indicated that a blister of land an elevation in the surface was occuring around Southport. Stewart said he spent the next six months studying and verifying the report, using tidal gauge studies. Stewart said tidal wave data is a questionable process, but he said, "For what it was worth it verified the NGS data." The state groundwater studies department then reported to Stewart unusual groundwater pressure in Wilmington. The department could not explain the unusual pressure. "The first good idea that they had heard was the possibility of an earthquake, Stewart said. outh s site to r by Lura Seism Staff Writer Student Body President Bill Bates said Sunday he will recommend that the UNC Board of Trustees consider Ehringhaus Field on South Campus instead of the Union parking lot as the location of a proposed new central library. The trustees approved plans Oct. 10 for the library to be located in thaUnion parking lot. Bates said that a preliminary report prepared by his staff on the proposed library site concluded that the Ehringhaus location would be better because it would be more convenient to a majority of on-campus students. Intramural games currently held on Ehringhaus Field could be played on the field behind James dormitory, Rick Buttner, head of the Student Government research staff, noted. He added that the loss of parking space in the Union lot, currently reserved for faculty and staff, would probably result in student parking spaces near classrooms being given to faculty, thus forcing students to park even further from campus. "Until we have a better bus system, that's just not the right thing to do," Buttner said. The report concluded that regardless of where the proposed library is located, the bus system must be upgraded in order to handle traffic to and from it, Buttner said. A parking deck in the basement of the library was also recommended, he added. Campus field 4P S B norary Rich HOT CHOCOLATE, Mountains of WHIPPED CREAM, & a CHERRY on top! Now available at STllCiErJT STOHES S.G1STE lasses for Modern Dance C Tn the Art School, Carrboro 7 weeks, beginning January 12 Beginners I Mon.,Wed. 10 a.m ft Beginners II Pin . Mon.. Wed 1 o.m. W??' Beginners III ' ?x J Tues., Thurs. 7 p.m. f Elementary kj ;fTues., Thurs. 5:30 p.m. h ,r f4 miermeaiate "t.&-$. Mon., Wed. 5:30 p.rn. N'-t .l7St - -' mm For info & registration, phone 942-2041; I J Tuition: $35 for the course jro . , --v r - i ' ' preterence. 03 1 n nnn n C V A ISA " a.. I I it it I I .... You can do it, too. So far almost 1,000,000 people have done it. People who have different jobs, different IQs, different interests, different educations have completed the course. Our graduates are people from all walks of life. These people have all taken a course developed by Evelyn Wood, a prominent educator. Practically all of them at least tripled their reading speed with equal or better com prehension. Most have increased it even more. Think for a moment what that means. All of them even the slowest now read an average novel in less than two hours. They read an entire issue of Time or Newsweek in 35 minutes. They don't skip or skim. They read every word. They use no machines. Instead, they let the material they're reading determine how fast they read. BUT EVELYN WOOD GRADUATES CAN READ JAWS IN 41 MINUTES At That Speed, The 309 Pages Come Across With More Impact Than The Movie. In Living Blood, You Might Say. And mark this well: they actually understand more, remember more, and enjoy more than when they read slowly. That's right! They understand more. They remember more. They enjoy more. You can do the same thing the place to learn more about it is at a free speed reading lesson. This is the same course President Kennedy had his Joint Chiefs of Staff take. The same one Senators and Congressmen have taken. Come to a free Speed Reading Lesson and find out. It is free to you and you will leave with a better understanding of why it works. Plan to attend a free Speed Reading Lesson and learn that it is possible to read 3-4-5 times faster, with better comprehension. SCHEDULE OF FREE SPEED READING -LESSONS-You'II increase your reading speed 50 lo 100 on the spot! ow TODAY Oi TORJil 4 P.SV3. oc 8 P, Carolina Inn On Cameron Avenue by the UNC Campus EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS "SCHOOL BUlLOIHe COLLAPSES OURIUS UIBRT!" GOOD Gif! . IB DON'T BOTHER TO 6T UP, SALLY... OUR SCHOOL FELL OVER LAST N16HT! LISTEN TO THIS... u I i! it ALL I J Buttner said that although the research staff had no data from the University Planning Office on what other construction was being considered for the campus, but assumed that the Union parking lot would be a more suitable location for a classroom building. "We (the research staff) know some new buildings will be put up, and North Campus is more practical for classrooms than South Campus because that's where most of the other classrooms are" Chancellor Ferebee Taylor said last October, when Bates first suggested a South Campus location for the proposed library-, that he opposed such a plan. Buttner noted Sunday that plans for the library were still tentative and added that the research staff received a letter from one trustee expressing a willingness to listen to any suggestions. Werley named acting dean of pharmacy LeRoy D. Werley Jr. has been appointed acting dean of the UNC School of Pharmacy by Chancellor Ferebee Taylor. Werley's appointment follows the death of Dean Seymour Blaug on Nov. 19. Werley, an associate professor of pharmacy, has served as assistant dean of the school since 1967. He is a graduate of the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy and holds a master's degree in hospital administration from the University of Minnesota. ) The pharmacy school will continue the programs begun by Dean Blaug, Werley said. Among these programs are a new graduate program in pharmacy administration and plans for a doctoral degree program in pharmacy. A search committee has begun seeking a permanent replacement for Blaug. Harvey L. Smith, professor of medical sociology and director of the Social Research Section of the UNC Division of Health Sciences, has been named chairperson of the committee by Taylor. Smith said the 14 committee members, including two students, "are informed and relevant people." The committee will gather information and viewpoints to develop a set of criteria for the position before actually considering nominations, he said. "Although this is a task we see clearly how to go about, we need to develop some specific information," Smith explained. The committee is expected to finish its work by the end of this semester. Correction An article in Friday's DTH incorrectly stated that Ken Pearson, NCMH director of volunteer services is seeking student volunteers to work a minimum of 30 hours per week. The coordinator of NCMH volunteers is Ken Pearce, not Ken Pearson, and he is seeking volunteers to work a minimum of 30 hours per semester, not per week. The DTH regrets the error. Job interviews for this week The following organizations will be holding recruiting interviews on campus this week: Tuesday: Goodwill Industries of America. Wednesday: Newport News Shipbuilding and Data General Corporation. Thursday: Continental Can Company. Friday: Village Advocate. Information and assistance pertaining to summer and full-time employers not represented by on-campus visits is available at the Career Planning and Placement Office, 211 Hanes Hall. USE DTH CLASSIFIEDS w.w.vv Th Dally Tr HmI is published by ttw University of North Carolina Media Board; dally txcpt Sunday, xam period, vacations, and summer sesssions. Th following dates are to be the only Saturday Issues: Sept 6, 20; Oct 1, 8; No. 11. 25. Offices are at the Student Union BuUdtno., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-0245, 833 0246; Butlntss, Circulation, Advertising, Advertising 933-1163. Subscription rates: $25 per year; $1250 per seme i tar. Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in Chapel Mil, N.C. 27514. The Campus Governing Council shall have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee end to appropriate aB revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution). The Daily Tar Heel reserve the right to regulate the typographical tone of aS advertisements and to revise or turn away copy H considers objectlonabie. The Dally Tar Heel wilt not consider adjustments or payments for any typogrsphi-eai errors or erroneous insertion unless notice is given to the Business Manager within (a) one day after the advertisement appears, within (1) day ct receiving the tear sheets or subs'pUon of the paper. The Di?y Tsr Hei -ia net' be rpon;tle lor mors than one Incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduk to run several time. Notice for such correction must be given before the next Insertion. Reynolds a Bailey.. ElUabeft F. Bal!ey Business f'gr. .Advertising Mgr.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 12, 1976, edition 1
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