Newspapers / The daily Tar Heel. / Feb. 9, 1977, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday, February 9, 1977 campus calends Public service announcements must be turned in to the box outside the 'DTH' offices in the . Union by 3:30 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item will run at least twice. t7 Compiled by Ten ley Ayers Activities Today The UNCCC Short Course on "Disk Data Set . Usage" will be at 3 p.m. in 228 Phillips Hall. The IRSS Short Course on "Statistical Analysis System. Session 2" will be at 7:30 p.m. in 307 Manning Hall. The UNC Outing Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 207 Carolina Union. Everyone is invited. The Coffee Klatch will meet again from 9 a.m. to 1 1 a.m. today and Thursday. Feb. 10. in the Pine Room: All students, faculty members and administrators are invited to come. Support us; drop by! YOGA offers yoga class from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in Room 205 of the Carolina Union. Everyone is welcome. The Lutheran Campus Ministry will celebrate the Eucharist at 5:15 p.m. at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church. A fellowship meal will follow at the Lutheran Campus Center at 6 p.m. N.C. Governor's School Alumni will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the South Gallery Meeting Room of . the Carolina Union. This is an organizational meeting and will be over by 8:15 p.m. i Youth For Easter Seals will meet at 5 p.m. in ; 104 Greenlaw Hall. Program and fund raising will ' be planned. Everyone is welcome. The Bible Study of St. John's Metropolitan Community Church will be at 8 p.m. For For sale: 1 965 VW with only 20.000 miles on rebuilt 1 967 engine. 'Needs some repairs. 9325 or best offer. Call 929 9407.. For sale: BIC 980 turntable and Shure M91 ED cartridge. Best offer, call 933-2671 after 7:00 p.m. ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands on file. Send SI .00 for your 192-page, mail order catalog. 1 1322 Idaho Ave.. 206H. Los Angeles. Calif,. 90025 (213) 477-8474. Parking space for rent within walking distance of campus. Call Joseph's 942-4068. Share 3-bedroom house with two grad students. Call Bill TrumbuH at 933-7593 days or 942-1 847. Leave message. Visiting scholar seeks fully furnished 2-3 bedroom homeapt. for 1977-78 academic year. References - available. Contact Dr. Marvin Chaney, San Francisco Theological Seminary. San Anselmo. Calif. 94960. ; Make extra cash and never leave your home. Greensboro Daily News needs people to telephone prospective sub- scribers. Please call 929-5705 or 942-6953. ' Management trainee - Junior fashions store. Must be highly motivated and career-minded. No degree necessary. Apply : in person (Wed. -Sat.. 1 1 a.m. -7 p.m.). Shearer's-University Mall. OVERSEAS JOBS summeryear-round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly. : Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free Information. Write: Inter I . national Job-Center. Dept.NL. Box, 449gBerkelejf1CA. 94704. I am doing research in Biorhythm and need the date of birth and date of death of anyone who has committed suicide. Please call Dee at 929-9306 if you can help. Lost: dorm key on small key ring in Union. East gate or Kings Arms Apt. area. If found, please call 933-1 1 63 or come by the Daily Tar Heel business office. The Upward Bound Program is now recruiting tutors. If in-, terested. come by 201 Vance Hall or call 933-1281 or 1282. EUROPE via PanAm 707. Less than 1 2 Economy Fare. Call toll free (6-9 pm) (800) 325-4867 or see your travel agent. 60-day advance payment required. Unitravel Charters. Assertive Training for Women. Volunteers wanted for ex perimental training in assertiveness, designed for un dergraduate women who find being assertive a significant problem in everyday situations. Sponsored by Psychology Dept. Interested? Call 942-8645. after 6:00 p.m. ' INSTA-COPY, offset printing and quick copying while you wait 100 satisfaction guaranteed. Check our fast service and low prices on theses work. INSTA-COPY, corner of Franklin i Columbia (over the Zoom), 929-2147. PRESTWICK MUSIC announces new hours: Monday through Friday 10:00-5:00. Used rock, jazz, blues albums, - 45's sell, buy, trade. 105 N. Columbia (above Big Wally's). 929j-7205. :. Talent needed for RTUMP 177 5-min. project. Tape Mon. Feb. 15 at 3:00. Interview format with commercial. Call Ben at 929-8169. Deep Jonah needs volunteers to help set up for Thursday night performances. Those interested should show up at 7:00 p.m. Ask for Ken. A pair of brown plastic framed women's eyeglasses were found Tuesday morning at the corner of Cameron and Columbia streets. Call 929-6468 ask for Dana. , , , , . S50.00 REWARD for return of a three-quarter length coat; light brown imitation mink and leather. Coat's been missing since Thurs. Please call 933-1961 anytime. . j Orange County Soccer Club meeting. Sunday 2:00 on field behind Hinton James to organize for NCSL league play. Br ing gear. 933-0551 . Reward for finding lost watch, a Gerrard Pergaux. lost by Woollen Gym on Saturday. Call Prof. Jerry Bell 933-8301 Carroll Hall. VW G0TTHE BLAHS? FEBRUARY SPECIALS:TUNE-UPS $10 PLUS PARTS. MUFFLERS $45 INSTALLED. WE WELCOME BANKAMERICARD AND MASTER CHARGE. THE BUG HAUS. 967-7414. Portrait sketches by Meredith Patterson at The Country Store. University Mall each Saturday in February. Charcoal $15.00; small pastel. $35.00; large pastel. $75.00. Ap pointments 942-2855. The Daily Tar Heel is published by the University of North Carolina Media Board; daily except Sunday, exam periods, vacations, and summer sessions. The following dates are to be the only Saturday issues. September 18. Oct. 16. Oct. 23. Nov. 13. Nov. 20. 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. 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 errora or erroneous insertion unless notice is given to the Business Manager within (a) one day after the advertisement appears, within (1) day of receiving the tear sheets or subscription of the paper. The Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible tor more than one incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduled to run several times. Notice for such correction must be given be lore the next insertion. Verne Taylor .... Business Mgr.' meeting place, call 967-0626 or 832-1582. St. John's is a Christian, predominantly gay church. The Association of International Students (AIS) will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the International Center of Bynum Hall to plan our Valentine Party for this Saturday. For more information, call 933 5661. The UNC Recreation Society will meet at 3:30 p.m. in Room 207 of the Carolina Union. All recreation majors and interested persons are urged to attend. The Women's Festival Committee will meet at 7 p.m. in Room .209 of the Carolina Union. All interested persons please attend. The UNC ECKANKAR International Student Society is holding an open ECK AN K AR discussion group at 7:30 p.m. in 522 Hamilton Hall. The public is invited. Worried o.ver Tests? Come to the free course sponsored by Alpha Epsilon Delta on test strategy for the MCAT and DAT. The first session starts at 7:30 p.m. in 103 Berryhill Flail and everyone is invited. Zoology Undergraduate Student Association will meet at 7 p.m. in the Frank Porter Graham Lounge of the Carolina Union. Final plans for the trip to the N.C. Zoo will be made. Gary Mitchell of N.C. State University will speak on the "High Resolution Resonance Spectroscope" at 4 p.m. in 265 Phillips Hall. Coffee and tea will be served at 3:30 p.rn. in Room 277. There will be a meeting of the Finance Committee of the GPSF at 7:30 p.m. in Suite D of the Carolina Union. Upcoming Events Dietrich Schroeer will speak on "The U.S. Soviet Nuclear Arms Race - Who's Ahead" for 1977 Colloquium on U.S. International Affairs at 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10, in 100 Hamilton Hall. I.es Reid. chairperson of the Parks and Recreation Department at Texas A & M, will speak at 3:30 p.m. Thursday. Feb. 10 in T-7 New Carroll. Sponsored by the UNC Recreation Society. The Speakers Commission will review petitions for speakers at 4 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10, in the Frank Porter Graham Lounge of the Carolina Union. The UNC Table Tennis Club will meet from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10, in the Women's Gym. All old and new players are invited to play. Just because Fred Wolfe isn't coming to the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies is no reason why members should not. We need to take up business concerning the Foundation Board, the Constitution and money. Be there at 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10, in 300 New West. Aloha. At 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Feb. 10, the BSU community will join with others at the Wesley Foundatioi for worship. This event will take the place of Thursday worship at 6 p.m. The Hunger Action Committee will meet at 9 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 10 in the upstairs in the Y Bldg. Everyone is welcome. Please call 942-7202 for more information. The Baha'i Club of UNC will sponsor an informal discussion on the Baha'i teachings concerning the oneness of religions at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Feb. 10. in Room 205 of the Carolina Union. N Carolyceum's Social Dance Class ( ballroom dancing) meets at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10. in 201 Bingham Hall. Come and learn the foxtrot (plus the waltz, jitterbug, etc.). Come alone, or bring a partner! Free, of course. Albert Long, the last Carolina 4-1etter man, will be the guest speaker at 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10, in the Ehringhaus Green Room. Sponsored by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Items of Interest Women's Varsity Softball Tryouts will be from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 16, on the Hinton James Field. Participants "must have physicals by Feb. 1 1 . Please go to the Student Infirmary from 9 p.m. to 1 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 9 through Feb. II. All those students who want beer sales on campus please come to the Union desk and sign the petitions for beer sales on campus. We need your support! Plan Assuring a College Education (PACE) applications for full-time summer College Work Study jobs are now available at the Student Aid Office. 300 Vance Hall. PACE applications should be submitted by April , I for first consideration. Tickets for the UNC-South Florida game will be distributed at 5 p.m. Thursday. Feb. 10. at Carmichael Auditorium. Anybody interested in playing Strat-O-Matic Baseball please call Paul at 929-6935. Are grocery prices breaking your budget? The Student Consumer Action Union needs volunteers to resume publication of "Comparison Shopper," a bi-weekly survey of local supermarket prices. To volunteer contact SCAU in Suite B of the Carolina Union. (933-8313 or 966-151 1) The Guidance and Testing Center announces limited openings in a personal growth group. This is a free service. The focus of the group will be on communicating better with others, dealing more effectively with feelings, and feeling better about oneself. An emphasis will be placed on learning how to make use of each other for support and growth. If interested, call 933-2175 and ask for a group screening interview with Jim Whiteside or Nancy Voight. Nuremberg still valid: Kaufman Draft may resume, warns Rogers WASHINGTON (UP1) Army Chief of Staff Bernard Rogers said Tuesday the nation might have to resume the draft to offset future manpower shortages and indicated present standby draft machinery could not meet the needs of a European war. The general told a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on European defenses that American units are now "outgunned" in some respects, and Soviet bloc troops "directly facing NATO are, in the main, more ready than NATjD defense forces,' Rogers answered cfuestions on whether as some members of Congress now believe the nation will need to return to the draft system scrapped in 1973. He did not link the potential need for a new draft with the present all-volunteer active army, but with shortages of Army reserve force manpower. Organized reserve units are 80,000 men below their peacetime manning goals, Rogers said. "If we cannot fill these reserve components, then very serious consideration must be given to implementation of Selective Service," he said. The two-year period that starts with the next budget, Oct. 1 , he said, will be "critical" in determining whether manpower needs can bemet without the draft. Rogers said NATO could have as little as 24 hours warning time in the event of any sudden Soviet bloc attack on Western Europe, "although my personal opinion is that we would have around 14 days." He said the present standby draft system would take an estimated 1 10 days to get the first draftee to a training center and 2 10 days into a unit. MWe would prefer that it might be quicker than that," he said. "We woud prefer 30 days to get him into the training command." Warnke selection attacked WASHINGTON (UPI)-Paul Warnke, President Carter's controversial choice as chief U.S. arms negotiator, acknowledged Tuesday his top secret copy of the Pentagon Papers found its way into the hands of Daniel Ellsberg who leaked it to the press in 1971. But Warnke told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee he never anticipated 'Ellsberg would try to get the document. Warnke went before the committee with a ringing endorsement from Carter who told a news conference he saw no conflict between his own views of arms reduction and those of Warnke. "1 think when the members of the Senate consider what Mr. Warnke stands for, he will be approved overwhelmingly." Carter said. Warnke's nomination drew criticism from conservatives who said his record indicated he might lean toward making one-sided arms reductions without winning similar cutbacks from the Russians. Warnke testified he had transferred the papers to a high security vault at the Rand Corporation after he left the Johnson Administration during which he served as an assistant secretary of defense. In answer to questions by Sen. Frank Church. D-ldaho, he said Ellsberg obtained the copy because "security requirements were not abided by." He said two former aides. Morton Halperin and Leslie Gelb, jointly authorized access to the documents for EINberg. by Laura Seism Staff Writer Principles established at the Nuremberg war-crime trials 30 years ago are still applicable today, said Mary Kaufman, one of .the prosecuting' attorneys at the Nuremberg trials. Speaking Monday night to a group of approximately 100 persons in the Great Hall, Kaufman explained the principles of Nuremberg and related them to Vietnam war draft resisters and the Wilmington 10 case in North Carolina. t The Nuremberg principles, she said, declared that initiating, planning and waging war is an international crime; that individuals are responsible for their actions even if under orders of higher government officials: and that complicity in any war crime is itself a crime. "We have the responsibility not to be accomplices in the criminal conduct of our government," Kaufman said. "We have to speak out and make our demands, and that's the meaning of Nuremberg." She described the Wilmington 10 as ' "people whose only criminal conduct was to fight for the rights of black people." Preventing repression, she said, "starts here at home. We have a responsibility to express ourselves in the Wilmington 10 case." Kaufman said the Nuremberg trials were held to establish a set of rules that would deter war and to establish a punishment for those who waged war. "At the end of World War II we all thought that the most barbaric war of all time had taken place, and we had to prevent that from happening again." But U .S. bombing during the V ietnam war "far exceeded the holocaust of World War II," she said. Kaufman served on an international commission that investigated U.S. war crimes in Indochina. Draft evaders and war resisters during the Vietnam conflict refused to become involved because, she said, based on the Nuremberg principles, they would have been as guilty of war crimes as government leaders. "They (the resisters) burned draft cards. They left the country. They did everything they could to resist. And they invoked the principles of Nuremberg as their defense: 'I would be in complicity, they said." Lawyers tried to turn this moral argument into a legal one, but the U.S. Supreme Court refused to rule on such cases, Kaufman said. During World War II, the United States also committed war crimes, Kaufman said, citing the use of the atom bomb over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But the principles of Nuremberg remain important, she said. "While Nuremberg doesn't become a principle that is self-executing, it does become a principle that we should use for stopping a nation from committing war crimes," she said. She said President Carter should grant total amnesty to all who had resisted the Vietnam war. The country is also obligated to rebuild Vietnam and to rehabilitate U.S. soldiers who became drug addicts as a result of serving there, she said. Cactus Ted's Famous Baneh louse "la ssuttnn Orsnp Cranfy nrnly eiuyhiy nds tb Emsh Heua Gaz$i The Ranch House is now presenting a Seafood Platter. We're featuring Flounder Fresh from the Chesapeake Bay Dinner includes: Choice of Flounder, Cole Slaw -j: Panned Trout, Croaker, or Spot All for only $2.90 Airport Road Hush Puppies French Fries Every Sun.-Fri. 5:30-9:00. ... ( And nou) f FOR THE I A SURPRISE... STANDING OUTSIDE IN ' THE HALL IS THE BRAVE HELICOPTER PILOT WHO PERFORMED THE RESCVEI IVE ASKED HIM TO COME HERE TODAY TO TELL YOU IN HIS OWN WORDS JU5T WHAT HAPPENED.' f NO, MA'AM ...HE'S ) ( NOT MARRIED... ) & ZD CO (f) LU Z o o Q MAN CANT 6ET HlSVWCKM&BlL WHAT DO WJMEAN, UIB60TA I RJSL PR0B- HAMSTD WATT UNTIL l LEM MARK? WE 6ET PLOWED MAN, THIS 15 N0P51&UT 6BTTIN6 SERIOUS! I'M 60 I NO OUT WHAT ABOUT THE N00JT0TAKB CAR? HAS TT ANOTHBRLOOK TURNED UP YBT? FOR IT.. MARK, WHAT AAH,TFS ... ARB US 60- GOTTA B5 ?fUt&- IN bin DO ntTTlJEZE :Zltf6'z IFffS S0MBWH5&! LLKDl T V a f tit GOOD Fmce WKSSl MORNING! y2r MUD- The Peace Corpsfl NEED EXPERIENCE? LOOKING FOR ACTION? Need something to put in a resume and show that you can excell beyond the classroom? r1r VISTA in: ACTION has openings for you in the PEACE CORPS in: Agriculture Architecture Planning Business Engineering Industrial Arts Vocational Ed. Home Ec. Health Professions Skilled Trades Other Sciences Representatives of ACTION will be on campus, scheduled through the Placement Office, from Feb. 14 until Feb. 16. ArchitecturePlanning Business Construction Education Health Professions Law Social Work D-4 The Washington Star Tfcunday. jamory 13. 1977 H appy the Man: Catch 'Rm Now, Tomorrow They 91 1 Be tars The Carolina Union is hoping to develop Chapel Hill as a place for musicians looking for fame. A new concept will he tried in the first of. hopefully, a series of shows. Admission : to the hall is free, and after the show, the crowd will be ask ed to donate however much money they felt the show was worth. Happy the Man's music can best be described as progressive, taking influences from the classical, rock, jazz, and acoustic styles, with mostly English roots. A light show accompanies Happy the Man to reconstruct each song visually. There's a great feeling involved when one sees or hears a group before they become famous. There will be a bunch of people around D.C. who will have that feeling after Happy the Man goes big . Your chance is here - what do you have to lose? Appearing On Campus Friday Feb. 11 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall Pay - what - you - like - as -you - leave! li
Feb. 9, 1977, edition 1
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