Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 24, 1978, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, January campus Compiled by Karen Barber Public service announcement! mutt be turned in to the box outside the DTH offices in the Union by 1:00 p m It theysre to run the nel day Each item will run af least twice ACTIVITIES TODAY 1 he South Campus Committee of the Carolina Union meet at 7 K p m. in the Mormon Conference Room. The UNC Young Democrats will hold their traditional semester beer blast al 8 p.m. in Room 217 Carolina Union, tveryone is muted. The Fellowship ol Christian Athlete will present the movie Tlx Dtvil'i Coach at 7:30 p m. in Kenan Field House. Everyone it welcome. The Association of Business Students will meet at ! p m. in the faculty lounge of Old CarrolhH all. A fried chicken dinner will follow the meeting Cost for the dinner is SI SO per person. T he Undergraduate An History Association will meet for the first general meeting of the year at 5 p m in Room 1 15 Ackland. The Omega Pal Phi Fraternity, Inc. will hold its Spring Smoker at 7:30 p m. in Room 2IS Carolina Union. 1 fit Outing CM) will meet at 7 p m in the C arolina Union. A talk will he presented on camping techniques. A meeting ol the UNC Crew Club officers will be held at 5 .30 p m ai the Carolina Inn cafeteria. The UNC Table Tennis Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the Vt omen's livm. All interested persons are invited. A I MX'C short course emit led Introduction to UNCCC will he pven ai 3pm in 22K Phillips Hall. Three North Carolina poets - Ann Deagon. David Chikiers. and Julia Willis - will he featured in a reading of original works al f! p m at the Art School. 150 E. Main St.. Carrboro. The Alchemist, the magarint that features science, will hold a staff meeting al 8 p m in the upstairs lounge of the Carolina Union. Many ol the present staff will graduate in the spring, leaving positions open Persons interested in writing, editing, advertising, and selling are encouraged to attend. A meeting for everyone interested in working with Special Olympics will be held at 8 p m in Room 20 Carolina Union. Tom Jackson, national authority on jobs and job findings, will speak at 8pm in Great Hall (not Memorial Hill as reported in the DTH yesterday). Admission is free. A reception tor Tom Jackson will be held at 9:30 p.m. in the faculty lounge of the Morehead planetarium. Sponsored by the Panhellenic Council. i "Alternative Careers and Lifestyles" will be the focus of two panel discussions at 2:30 p m in Room 202 Carolina Union. Both discussions are teaiurcs of the AWS Women's Festival. Tom Jackson will hold a workshop on "Self-defeating Attitudes of Women Seeking Jobs" at I p.m. in Room 2IJ Carolina Union. Seniors or graduate students seeking employment who want to use the services of the Career Planning and Placement office are invited to an oiicniaiion meeting at 3 .30 p m in 103 Hanet Hall. UPCOMING EVENTS College Students In Broadcasting will meet at 7 30 p.m. Wednesday in the South Gallery meeting room of the Carolina Union. A guest speaker from WRDU will be present, and final plans will he made for "Broadcaster for a Day." An oiaiimatKinal meeting for Carolina Gold, the campus Girl Scout group, will he held ai 7 p m. Wednesday in 425 Hamilton Hall. All old Girl Scouts and anyone else interested may attend I he Education Bill Committee of NCSL Will meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday al the Institute ol Government. Lutheran Campus Ministry meets at 5: 15 p m. Wednesday at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church for Holy Communion. A common meal and fellowship will follow al 6 p.m. in the Campus Center behind the church Trvouts for the Ebony Readers will be held at 7 30 p.m. Wednesday in the Hinton James Coffee House. All interested persons, especially males, are urged to try out. The N.C. Coastal Club will hold an important meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the South Lounge of the Carolina Union. All club members are asked to attend. A kb-aeeklng workshop will be held at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in 210 Hanes Hall. A UNCCC short course on Computer Assisted Document Prep. (Intro, to SCRIPT) will be held at 3 p.m. Wednesday in 228 Phillips Hall I he Science Fiction and Fantasy Club will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in 308 Alumni. The program will be "Time Travel." Students Older than Average will have a bag lunch at noon Wednesday in Rooms 213-215 Carolina Union. Bring a sandwich and a friend Codec will be supplied. The Student American Pharmaceutical Association is sponsoring a Diabetes Screening Clinic from 5 to 9 p m. Wednesday and Ihursdav at University Mall. The Budget Review Committee will conduct s hearing at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in Room 217 Carolina Union to take suggestions on improving the CGC budget process. All campus organizations receiving or desiring funds are urged to send a representative and inierested students should attend. This is not a budget hearing. The UNC Advertising Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in 203 Howell Hall. Dr. Walter Gilbert of Harvard University will speak on"DNA Job recruiters on The following employers and graduate school representatives will be on campus to discuss job opportunities and academic programs on the dates indicated. Students who are registered with Career Planning & Placement may sign up for appointments with these representatives eight days ahead of the visit in 21 1 Hanes Hall. Information and assistance pertaining to summer and full-time employers not represented by on-camput visits is also available. Jan. 30 Wake County Public Schools Prime Computer Inc. Citizens & Southern National Bank (Columbia, S C.) Jan. 31 Chemical Abstracts Service Camp Thunderbird Duke Power Co. Cnmhrrlanrl County Public Schools Montgomery Ward A Co. Let the DTH know about it! Call 933-0245 Seen Anything Unique Lately? DOONESBURY THIS ISTHE FIRST fSSU, MR. PRESIPENTl I I ' HAD WPEMP60NSENP J rrmco Ac enrskt Ac rr HAROLD. MILITARY - CAME OFF THE PRESSES! THIS 15 MV SCIENCE REPORT WHICH IS ON TRAFFIC SAFETY k THE FIRST THING 1 PIP WAS TO MEA5URE THE (JlllPTH OF THE STREET IN FRONT OF OUR SCHOOL.. in off Tt 'rjxafirV VuP. t wyipiccup ft (PbPutRfttW or fvr $ Read the uw . XHAVE1 VoO , L JX LOAF OF BREAD PoNK PsCH hlXritWooi,WS il nrTOo-x YooC Qoori VlXV ON SooQ. V ftV S GDNTlrJUC To rCSl mt l UK--r irliM- WET0K10H1.' SOftR! PfiDFEOfi H $ ,PJTHflT Wfr? (jO- twits-A 24, 1978 calendar- Sequencing anil H;ond"ai Kp.m. V3cdncMla "i 20 enable Mali Sponsored by the UNC Department of Chemistry. The public is invited to a special meeting of the Chapel Hill Carrboro Rape Crisis Center si 7 pm. Wednesday at the Carolina Union. The purpose of the meeting will be to examine critically several films dealing with sexual assault. ITEMS OF INTEREST The Chapel Hill Public l ibrary presents Dr. Jekyt and Mr. Hyde at 7 p m. today and Wednesday in the I ihrary Meeting Room. The movie stars Spencer Tracy. Ingrid Bergman. I ana Turner. Donald Crisp and Ian Hunter. Comparison Shopper is hack! All those interested in helping should attend an organisational meeting at 4 p.m. Thursday in the SCAU office. Petitions for all elected BSM offices will be available in the BSM office on Wednesday. These offices include chairperson, vice chairperson, secretary, treasurer and representative. Any gueslkins should be addressed to the BSM's elections hoard chairperson. A representative from Hallmark cards will interv iew juniors and seniors on Feb. I for an internship in retailing. Dependable persons considering retailing as a career can sign up in 211 Hanes Hall. Bring a resume with you. All girls interested in signing up for Spring Informal Sorortty Rush should sign up in the Panhellenic Oil ice in the Carolina Union before Feb I. All girls interested in signing up for spring sorority rush should sign up in the Panhellenic office before Jan. 31. Applications for the title of Ma. Black Ink will he available inthr BSM office until Feb. 3 All interested young ladies - freshmen, sophomores, and juniors - are urged to apply . Call 933-4596 for more information. Fat your exit up and have your free portrait taken for the I97D Yackeiy tack. The photographers will be taking portraits from a m. to noon on Monday. Wednesday and Friday and from I to5 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday from Jan. 30 through Feb. 10. If you didn't have your picture made last fall, or you did hut weren't pleased with it. sign up for an appointment any weekday at the Carolina Union from 9 a m to 5pm. the Y -Court from 9 a.m. to I pm.. or by calling the Ymk office at 933-1259 between I and 3 p.m. The University Counseling Center is offering the following group programs this semester: assertion training, career exploration, personal growth, test anxiety reduction, women in transition, family crisis, couples enrichment and two groups for students older than average For more information. call933-2l75. Petri lone tor all student offices are available in Suite C of the Carolina Union and should be returned no later than 5 p.m.. Feb. 6. Information on summer ob opportunities in the federal, government is now available in 211 Hanes Hull. Announcement No. 414 lists both clerical and non-clerical openings with locations. Application for the written test (needed for clerical jobs) is also included. Applications arc now available at the International Center for the UNC-Gottlngen Exchange Program for the 1978-79 school year. This program is an expense-paid study-abroad opportunity for undergraduates at a West Cierman university Applicants a should be fluent in German. The International. Center sponsors a two-day, overnight orientation program for new foreign students in the fall at Camp New Hope. Thu is an opportunity for UNC students to meet with international students in sn informal environment. Anyone interested in assisting with the organization of the program or in being a counselor at the camp, please contact Peter Topping at the International Center. National Merit Scholarship checks arc now available for the spring semester. Merit Scholars should come to the second floor of the Student Aid Office. Vance Hall, between the hours ol 8 a m. and 5 p.m. weekdays and present their class schedules to receive these funds. Pass-fall registration will be held through Feb 8 in the dean's offices of the respective schools. night Continued from page 1. "Sometimes they don't look at what we send in." he said. "We don't anticipate this happening again." He said he doesn't know if the show can be rebroadcast for the viewers who missed it Saturday. The show was broadcast live, and McLarty doesn't know if a tape was made. "If we get enough requests (to run Saturday Night, we can try," he said. Well, EXCUUUUUUUUUUUSE ME! campus this week Jan. 31- Abraham 4 Straus Feb. I Exiton E. I. Dupont De Nemours A Co., Inc. Bureau of the Census Armstrong Cork Co. Prudential Insurance Co. General Electric Hallmark Cards Inc. (lor retail internship Feb. 2 Exxon Hallmark Cards Inc. (career jobs) First National Bank of Atlanta Chubb Group of Insurance Companies Carolina Power Sl Light Co. Feb. 3 Pilot Life Insurance Co. Group Hospitalization First Citizens Bank & Trust Co. HMM..trSA VERY HANDSOME- CATALO&JB, HEY! THERE'S A SPREAD HERE ON THE 8-1 JVE NEVER SEEN HARDWARE SO m.. -THERE IS? BOMBER'. I r uiithAV ruler! F--'-""i""'""'-,y i, ..,f"-i' !...,, :::::,::::: sfr - W ' V Ss , II $ - . . . 1 '"W -:. . , ., '.... ' !' .... .'.)'.,- ..,. i "i fc. f I p . ,. , 4i f rf jf sw. Warhol featured Andy Warhol, the prince of pop art, is the subject of a documentary at the American . Avant-Garde series, at 8 tonight in Carroll Hall. The animation masterpiece Heaven and Earth Magic Feature will also be shown. Admission free with student I.D. Dorm sign-up procedures to be topic of workshops Dormitory room sign-up procedures will be the topic for workshops to be held at 2:30 p.m. today and 2 p.m. Wednesday in 209 Manning Hall, said Peggy Gibbs. assistant to the director of contracts. Gibbs said the workshops would be directed primarily at resident assistants and dorm staffs, but she encouraged any students with questions about procedures to attend. Housing application-contract cards are included in Room to Live booklets, which will be available in residence halls after Feb. 6. Sign-up instruction sheets list the following schedule for deadlines and drawings: 3 p.m. Feb. 28 deadline for submitting applications to KDs. iOa.m. March 14 preliminary draw ing for between-building moves. March 1 6 -- lists posted of those selected in the preliminary drawing. March 17 drawings for students returning to present residence halls. (Times and places to be announced by RDs.) 4:00 6:45 9:40 NO IPO PASSES' ITCAHTBB, SIR. THERESA CRUISE MISSLE SUPPLEMENT. MAYBE ITS A CUBE-OUT. HAROLD, THIS IS LAST YEAR'S CATALOGUE1. SHOWS ANNE !, ,f, BANCROFT SHIRLEY frr fl-VM 5:?0 Tl I rrJuS m ABC AAM -"liinsn--, raV- CARDS )rrcrjH nt' maac G?0,0, OTSi!0l filifSl Held Over I FeT2I tfeil :WEUj 5th Big Week rai pas 1 1 - 9:2? i!n fa 8 l, .. ,'T"tz-y jE,r -i-JuuiLaitu j B by Garry Trudeau Klllnl N(W I y j Showing 1 f 5 ( GET OFF wA I VBACX, KlPW March 24 drawing to determine position on central waiting list. March 28 waiting list posted. March 31 -- room assignments mailed. June 15 full fall rent due. Quotas for present residents who will be allowed to return to their buildings next year will be slightly lower than quotas last year to provide space for incoming freshmen without tripling rooms, according to the instruction sheet. now being served at Collegs Csfo Carr Mill 5:30-8 PM Mon.-Sat. V SB Saturday 5:00 7:15 9:30 NICHI FEVEU JOHN TRAVOLTA A PARAMOUNT PICTURE r Held Over 5th Big Week SHOWS 3:10 5:20 7:30 9:40 ' fZ? (5R1 V-ifc-JsV " llll'S IKlM VI 1 -VT"l Kl KHHAK!) DRCYFUSS MAt.SHA MASrf" s..s.''.i.'.'..'...'..'.'.'..,.,:,.v.,.''.1'' SHOWS AT: 7:00 9:00 ,l..ls-ulil ' i a J:: AgndVorck3'$ ' 1 SHOWS AT: 7:15 9:15 (fi2jftt J-SJ shl7g 1 jkeatK shows '.'i :;. .v.. : AT: : ' 1 i I ! 7:30 taw- , iL,v-J 9:30 !: j jj r-,j survey vote if the Carter-Ford election were held today (Nov.). Carter got the nod, 5 1. 4 to. 43.3 percent. Blacks favored Carter, 82 to 14 percent. But his support was shaky among females, who favored him, 49 to 47 percent. Males preferred Carter 53 to 39 percent. The only subgroup opting to reverse the election was the junior class, which favored Ford by 50 to 43 percent. Thirteen percent of students said their vote in the mock election was a change from their preference a year earlier. Eighty-one percent reported no change. The subgroups reporting the most change were blacks, 23 percent of whom said a year brought a reversal of opinion, and freshmen at 18 percent. The survey did not measure whether reversals were from Carter to Ford or from Ford to Carter. Dance company The Footpath Dance Company, an all-female modern dance troupe from Ohio, will appear at 8 p.m. today in Memorial Hall. Admission to the event, which is sponsored by the UNC Women's Festival, is SI. The troupe also will conduct a master class in modern dance Tuesday afternoon. Footpath, under the guidance of artistic director Alice Rubinstein, is a fairly new company, formed in 1976. Rubinstein organized the troupe after becoming dissatisfied with the Karipides-Kurth company, with which she was dancing at Case Western Reserve University. She gathered around her a collection of extremely talented and superbly trained women, individuals who had studied with a collection of teachers ranging from Twyla Tharp to Hanya Holm to Erick Hawkins. Interestingly enough the troupe was all female only by coincidence, none of the COME WATCH THE TAR HEEL games and join your friends at "He's Not Here." Two TV's, Happy Hour everyday, fine selection of domestic and imported beers. Open seven days, downtown Chapel Hill. ill NORTH CAMPUS: DORM CONTRACT for sale. 207 Joyner. Discount. Call 933-8749. CHEAP! NEAR HALF PRICE! Spring Morrison dorm contract for sale! Male or female! Will compromise at price! No offer could be better! Contact Be veriy Brown! PART TIME WORK $4.25 PER HOUR to start. Can lead to state-wide summer opening. Apply today at Room 209, Union at 3:10. THE CAMPUS GOVERNING COUNCIL needs a clerk. Pay is $2.65hour, 8-10 hoursweek. Applications available through Tuesday, 9-5 in Suite C of the Union. SCHIANOS PIZZERIA NEEDS PART TIME HELP. Call between 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. Ask for Sal or John, 489-8632. AFTERSCHOOL BABYSITTER needed for our elementary school children. Two or more days per week, from 2:45-5:15. Own transportation necessary. Some light housekeeping. $7 per day. Several students could share this job. 967-5107 evenings. . ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS: Looking for a part-time job with good income, flexible hours, and real experience with a career opportunity in the business world? Call Jim Morgan, Northwestern Mutual Life, 942-4187. PIANO TEACHER NEEDED to come to our house once a week to teach an 8-year-old beginner & a 10-years-old with some experience. 967-5107 evenings. KYLE - HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Hope your 21st is the best yet. Have a great day. Love always, Josh. P.S. Wanna go buy some liquor? WHAT COULD BE MORE FUN than to be a Tar Heel KD and 21? Bunches of love, Mom, Dad, and Joe Ski. !iiMM?iiifittt LOST RUST SUEDE POCKETBOOK near "bus stop on Franklin. Please return to information desk in the Student Union for a reward. No questions asked! SPRING BREAK CRUISE from Ft. Lauderdale - Space limited Call now for further details 942 41. I IT. 'SJb lb 11 iii. fay Continued from page 1. Approval of Carter's first 10 months in office also was measured. Five percent rated Carter "very good," 38 percent "good," 37 percent "neither good nor poor," 1 1 percent "poor" and 4 percent "very poor." Reaction to Carter was most favorable among graduate students, 63 percent of whom rated Carter's performance "good" or "very good." Next lowest were females and freshmen at 37 percent. Jesse Helms, North Carolina's senior U.S. senator, met with far less approval. "Very poor" was the most common response about his performance, cited by 27 percent. Six percent rated Helms "very good," 10 percent "good," 19 percent "neither good nor poor" and 15 percent "poor." Helms had more support from males, 21 percent of whom rated his performance "good" or "very good," and juniors at 20 percent. to appear tonight ' auditioning males matched the technical level of the women. Rubinstein herself studied with Martha Graham, Hawkins, and at the Juilliard School of Music. Her company, which made its debut in November 1976at Lake Erie College, immediately was praised by critics for its originality, and for the open emotionality of the works performed. The high technical proficiency of each of the dancers and the expressions of individuality which was afforded them also were applauded. There performances here will include pieces introduced at Lake Erie, such as Anna, a portrait of a woman at different stages in her life, and more recent works. Footpath's performance here should be highly innovative and entertaining if the dancers live up to their recently acquired, yet highly positive, reputation. SOLID BRASS with KEY RING MARDI GRAS IS NOT FAR AW A VI fW hue f chailered. rouridfrip to New 'Orleans, is quickly wiing upi u interested, can boo - W-86U1, or trie - '.trNWirinl ' - ' J TYPING - THESES, PAPERS, RESUMES, applications reasonable rates. Executive Secretarial Services, 100 Eastowne Drive, (Across from Blue CrossBlue Shield) 929-0286, 493-1488. cti SWEATY PALMS? Heart palpitations? Stomach distress? You could be suffering from test anxiety. Help might be found in the TEST ANXIETY ' REDUCTION group at the University Counseling '. Center. Call 933-2175 for more information. 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 & Columbia (over the Zoom), 929-2147. CAMPUS COPY CENTER - For all your duplicating and copy needs. We provide fast, high quality service at reasonable cost. Located on the alley by the Porthole. Phone 929-3119. Classified info Pick up ad forms in any classified box at all DTH pickup spots or at DTH Office. Return ad and check or money order to " DTH Office 12:00 (noon) 1 day before the ad will run or in campus mail 2 days before. Ads must be prepaid. Rates: 25 words or less Students $1.50 Non-Students 2.50 5t for each additional word , ' $1.00 for boxed ad or bold type j Please notify the DTH Office if there are mistakes in your ad, immediately! We will. '" only be responsible for the first ad run. Th Dotty T Htwl Is publish! try the Dilly Tw HmI Board of Dlrsctora of the Unhasr srty of North Cavolna daily Monday through Friday during trt ragutar acadamic yaar axcapt during sum partod. vacations and aummar sasaions. Tha Mowing dataa ars to ba tha only Saturday . iasuaa: 8 apt, 17, Oct. 1, 8. 22. Nov. 6. Tha Summar Tar Haal la pubHahad waaMy on Thuradays during tha aummar sessions. Off ioas ars at tha Frank Porta Graham 8tudant Union Building. Univarsfty of North Carolina, Chapal HIM, N.C. 27614. Tatophona itumbara: Naws. Sports-833-0245. 833-0248, 833 0252. 833-0372; Buainaaa. Circulation, ' Advartiaing-833-1163. Subscription ratas; 426 par yaar; 412.60 par aamaatar. Tha Campus Governing Council snail hava powara to detarnwha tha Student Acttvfliea Fea and to eppropriata all revenue derived from tha Student Activities Fea (1.1.14 of tha Student Constitution). Tha Dairy Tar Heel It a student orgm feat ion. The Dairy Tar Heel rseervea the right to regulate the typographical tone of aN advertieemants and to revise or turn away copy H considers objec tionable. The Dairy Tar Heal will not consider ad (ustments or payment for any typographical .errors or erroneous insertion unless notice la given to the Business Manager within (1 Ion day attar the advertisement appear, within (1 ) day of receiving tha tear sheet or subscription of the paper. The Daily Tar Haal wHI not be responsible for mora than on Incorrect insertion of an adver tieament acheduled to run several time. Notice for such correction must ba given before tha next Insertion. Clair Bagley. Dan Collaia . . . . . Business Manager . Attvarl l ting Mantgar crrsv 1 w. . y j tii .l'. 'I'ij iWi jfcs.a.- - i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 24, 1978, edition 1
2
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