4 Tha Daily Tar Heel I Wednesday, November 15. 1978
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Jfieaaers'.do
K
esey
vel
The UNC Reader's Theater. will
present an adaptation of Ken Kesey's
novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Next
at 7:30 and 9 tonieht and Thursday in
rooms 202-204 Carolina Union.
The adaptation, written by Owen Page
and Dace MacPherson, involves one
man's struggles in a mental hospital. The
focus is on McMurphy, who shows the
patients how to continue living and to
oppose the tyranny of the Big Nurse.
Tile cast includes Mark Kogan as
McMurphy, Owen Page as Chief
Bromden and Celeste Ford as Big Nurse.
Other cast members are Scott Allen,
C.W. Casey, Mark Fox, Susan Gravely,
Susan Hite and Tim McMains.
"What 1 really want to show is the
struggle between how society expects
man to act and how man really does act,"
said MacPherson. director of the show.
UNC women
to sing tonight
The UNC Women's Chorus presents
music from many eras in a concert at 5:15
today in Hill Hall auditorium.
The chorus of 30 voices will perform
selections by Purcell, Brahms, Gershwin
and others, according to conductors
Dean Johnson and David Stuntz. Lois
Strother is piano accompanist.
CamrDpiuis Caleirndlair
Public service announcements must be turned in at the box outside the D FHoff ices in the Carolina Union .
by 1 p.m. H they are to run the next day. Each item will be run at least twice.
ACTIVITIES TODAY
ECOS will show a film. "More Nuclear Power Slattern." at
8 p.m. in Room 101 Greenlaw Hall.
Buy your 1979 Yatkeiv Yack Irom t a.m.-5 p.m. in the
Carolina Union. Last chance to win I he Windsor International
bicycle
Forum on "What Makes an Excellent I ndergraduate
Educationr at 7:.K p.m. in the Person Hall Choral Room.
West Wing. ...,....
The Graduate History Society and the C urnculum in
American Studies present Gene Wise speaking on "An Agenda
for C ontemporary Culture Studies" at 8 p.m. in Room 509
Hamilton Hall. .
An informational meeting discussing UNC-CH summer
courses offered in London. LnRland. Oxford and Europe will
he held at 7:.t0 p.m. in Room 2IK IVahody Hall.
The l nderradute Art History Association will hold a
meeting at 4:30 p.m. in Room IIS Aekland.
Watch the College Bowl Einah al 7 p.m. in Great Hall.
Carolina Union.
JJC3 Hie SCS-ZL
J i
would like to announce Us change ot
management now ottering .ill the beer you
can drink till the keg runs out with the
purchase of THE HOACII-: (good from 3-5
Tuesday through Friday)
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Delta Phi Epsilon is having a husiness meeting at 7 p.m. in
the South Gallery Meeting Room. Carolina Union.
The Hunger Action Committee is opening the last with the
film "Bottle Bahies" at 6 p.m. at the Wesley Foundation.
The I'NC Scuba C lub will meet at 7 p.m. in Room '304
Woollen Gym.
The I.E. Speech Team will meet at 7:M p.m. in Room 217
Bingham Hall.
Ready to look lor a ion? Come to the Job-Seeking
Workshop at 1.30 p.m in Room 2(N Hanes Hall. Please
prepare the workshop material available in Room 21 1 Hanes
Hall.
"W ilmington Iw-l'SA. IB.000" a movie premier at 7 p.m. in
N.C. Central B.N. Duke Auditorium.
Lutheran Campus Ministry meets lor Holy Communion at
5:15 p.m. at the Holy Trinity I utheran Church. Supper will
follow at 6 p.m. in the Campus Center.
AXE Brothers and Sisters w ill meet at 5 p.m. in Room 305
Venahlc Hall to build a homecoming flout.
The R.E. Coker Lecture in Zoology will he presented by
Stephen A. Wainwright of Duke at 4 p.m. in Room 107 Wilson
Hall.
"Ophthalmology at North Carolina Memorial Hospital",
will be the program topic for the general meeting of the
Hospital's Auxiliary at 10 a.m. at the Institute of Pharmacy.
The Episcopal Campus Ministry Eucharist is at 10 p.m. in '
the Chapel of the Cross.
The N.C. Coastal Club will meet at 5 p.m. in the South
Gallery Lounge of the Carolina I'nion. All members please
attend.
Come see I'NC play Duke in waterpoio at X:30 p.m. at the
indoor pool.
The I'NC Ski ( lub will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 217
Carolina Union. Bring a check lor dues. Sign-ups for -Killington.
I'tah. Sugar and Beech are in progress.
A food service committee meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the Frank
Porter Graham Lounge.
R.J. Serflin of Florida State I'lmcrstiy will speak "On
I'niform Consistency Kates and Applications in
. Nonpar ametric Density Estimation" at 4 p.m. in Room 324
Phillips Hall.
I he English Department will sponsor a book signing for
Daphne Alhas. honoring the publication of her new hook
CViro at 4:30 p.m. in the Bull's Head Bookshop and UNC
Student Stores.
H you enjoy good musk, come hear i be chonises perform at
4 p.m. in the Hill Hall Auditorium
The Linguistics Ci clew ill hold its I97S EaltC oHoquiumat I
p m. in Toy l ounge on the lourth floor of Dcy Hall.
Peter J. Wagner of M ichigan State I 'niversitv will speak on
"Conformational limitations m Phftforeactivity- at Mam.
in Room 30X V enable Hall.
(ierald Lucovsky of the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
w ill speak on" V ibrat ional Properties of Network AmorphoMS
Solids" at 12 p.m. in Room 265 Phillips Hall..
U. Wille of Hahn-Mcilner-lnsiiiut. Berlin. Germany will
speak on the "Theory of ( ollision Broadening its Molecular
Orbital X-Ray Spectra" at 1 1 a.m. in Room 227 Phillips
Hall. I. Lcfkowti7 of the Army Research Office and UNC
CH will speak on "High Te Superconductivity: Exctton's
Low Mode' Ecrroeiectricity and IheC'uC'l Problem" at 4 p.m.
in Room 265 Phillips Hall.
The First Collegiate Bassmaslen wilt meet al 7:30 p.m. in
Room 327 Ehringhaus OornO
Interested in a career vacation thai combines the excitement
of living abroad with working in your specialised field".' The
International Assreiation for the Exchange of Students for
Technical Experience organization coordinates on-the-job
training in one or 46 countries for students of architecture,
agriculture, mathematics and the sciences. A representative
from the IAF.STE organization will he on campus from 10:30
a m -noon to answer questions. Interested students should
come by the international Center. Bvnum Hall basement,
during that time.
I PC OMIM. EVENTS
Ellen Scouten. administrative assistant to the District '
Attorney, will answer legal questions about rape and sexual
assuaH at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Presbyterian Student Center.
Thursday's Gay Issues' lorum will discuss
"Homosexuality: A Civil Rights Question" at 7:30 p.m.! the
L'CCDixie Trail and Wade Avenue. Raleigh.
Campus Crusade's leadership Training Class will be held at.
7 p.m. Thursday in the fourth floor I acuity lounge. Dev Hall
Want to juggle? Come by the Old Well at 4 p.m. Thursday
and do it with the UNC Jugglers.
Is it crazy to love marker pens that give you the smoothest, thinnest line in
town., .and feel so right in your hand? Is it mad to worship pens with clever
little metal "collars" to keep their plastic points fromgetting squishy?
Not if the pen is a Pilot marker pen.
Our Razor Point, at only. 790, gives
the kind of extra-fine delicate line you'll flip
:ver. And for those times you want a little less
line, have a fling with our fine point
690Fmeliner. It has the.wilj and fortitude to
actually write through carbons.
So, don't settle for a casual relationship.
Get yourself a lasting one, or two, to have
and to hold... at your college book store.
Pilot Corp. of America, 30 Midland Ave.,
Port Chester, New York 10573.
-
Hnetjia mortcar pens
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Tickets: 7on98 (oil seats reserved)
Tickets On Sale -Greensboro Coliseum Box Off ice... All Authorized Belk Ticket
Out lets. ..Peaches Records in Greensboro... Reznick's in Winston Salem...
ThelCivic Center in Raleigh. ..and Wickline Drug in Collinsville, Virginia
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POM EST IPBSZA
WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY!
11 A.M. TO 3 P.M.
A r.lAD HATTER SPECIAL
ALL-YOU-CAfl-EAT
40 FRESH DELICIOUS ITEHS!
00
FOR THE FINEST IN
FOOD AND EN TER TA IN MEN T,
IT'S
r m as
C3Tu
El
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY!
With the purchase of a dinner
vAfter 5:00 P.M.
FHEE; ADMISSION
to see a fine west coast band
"LlODEOT, E10E1V & BICEl"
. FRANKLIN STREET
929-8276
Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-3 p.m., 5 p.m.-12
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m.-3 p.m., 5 p.m.-3 a.m
1 MA V
William Kunstlcr will speak on "Is Ihcrr Justice in
Aaarica7"al 1 1.50 a.m. I hursday in Room 5 of the I'NC Law
School
A. workshop lo prepare for Interviews for medical school
will he held at 7 p.m. Thursday in Room 103 Nash Hall. Sign
' up m Room 31 1 South Building. '
Attention fasten: There will he a break fast and discussion
al 6 p.m. Thursday al the Wesley Foundation.
There will be a Une Arts Kestival meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in Room. 10IA Swain Hall.
A Fellowship of C hristian Athletes'' meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in League Dorm basement.
The Cam pus Y will host an International Koffee K latch at 2
p.m. Thursday in the South Gallery. Carolina Union.
ITEMS Ot INTEREST
The band Sugar Creek will be at the Granville Towers
- Homecoming Dance from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Friday.
Students who have not picked up their 1978 Yackely Yat ks
may do to from 1-5 p.m. through Friday in Suite D of the
Carolina Union. Bring your receipt and ID.
The Medical Technology Club will sponsor guided tours of
the hospital laboratories at 3:31) p.m. Wednesday and
Thursday starting in Room B-12 Old Nurses Dorm.
The raffle for Toronto Exchange w ill be held Tuesday Nov.
21 at 4 p.m. in the Pit instead of Friday.
The Carolina Gay Association's weekly public affairs
program airs Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. on WXYC-FM 89.
Any graduate, student interested in serving on the
Chancelor'a committees please contact the GPSF office at
933-5675.
The UNC Reader Theater will present an adaptation of
Ken Kesey's One Fie Over the Cuikoo's Sest at 8 p.m.
through Thursday in Room 202-204 Carolina Union.
I'SHERS needed for the I p.m. Wednesday matinee of
PRCs Threads. Sign up on second floor Graham Memorial
Building.
All students are invited to submit proposals for the Carolina
SymposHtm, a biennial forum exploring a particular topic
through various media. Information may be obtained through
Sam Sockwell at 968-9305 or Tim Sullivan at 942-7938.
, - Applications are being accepted for the position of
education director and news director at WXYC FM-89. See
the bulletin board at WXYC for more details or call Gary
Davis, station manager, at 942-4745.
Bond
From page 1
Bond said. "Two years later, we discover
a man who knew the words to our hymns
but not the numbers on our paychecks."
Bond blamed Howard Jarvis and Allen
Bakke for the two most detrimental
blows to the civil rights movement in the
1970s. He said Bakke's lawsuit turned the
Constitution around. "Until 1954, this
noble document had slammed the
schooldoors in our faces, Bond said.
Bond said the Bakke decision would
insure "only the male and the" pale" will
receive the best education and jobs, and
called reverse discrimination "a
laughable notion that implies that 13
percent of the population will force the
other 87 percent to have the worst jobs
and the worst schools.
Bond called Jarvis Proposition 13
"social arson at the grassroots' and said it
is "the first battle in a war between the
haves and the have-nots.
He said the poor and the blacks sit on
r
their doorsteps and "wonder why their
American dream is a nightmare."
Bond often quoted statistics during the
course of his speech. He said that, on the
average, a black man with a college
education annually earns $110 less than a
white man without a college education.
He also used statistics showing that
although a minority of blacks believe in
voting, a majority believe they had shown
their political activism by signing a
petition.
"The food Andy Young eats doesn't
feed their stomachs," Bond said about
blacks and the poor. Twice as many
blacks are unemployed in 1978 as were in
1968, Bond said. Blacks comprise 20
percent of the people who have been
unemployed for 15 weeks, 30 percent of
those unemployed for 27 weeks and 34
percent of those who have been jobless
for a year. However, blacks comprise
only 20 percent of the work force.
. Delivery . r-e" .. as? J -ST
942-8513 Hours:' ,AV Ha-M
942-8515 Sun.-Thur. 5-10:30 p.m'fij.,i'
Fri-mfdniohp,m', w-y&v
. midnight '
THE Daily Crossword by James Barrick
ACROSS
1 Bit of hay
5 Ciphers
10 Numb
14 Pagan image
15 High in the
sky
16 Sailors'
patron
saint
17 Actress
Louise
18 Modern
20 Large cask
22 Cuadrilla
chief
23 Self-satisfied
24 '- My
Everything"
26 Get spliced
again
29 Glue to
gether 32 Silkworm
33 Embankment
35 Oriental
37 Cambridge
campus
letters
38 Wails
40 Fruit plus
crust
41 Dark yellow
44 Electric
signs
46 White or
red insect
47 Allocate
49 Abilities
51 Mark used
in editing
53 Duck's
milieu
Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:
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54 Jai alai
57 Echoed
61 Hyperki
netic 63 Skirt for
a dancer
64 Edible part
65 Organic
compound
66 Old French
coins
67 Purposes
63 Visionary
ones
69 Stage piece
DOWN
1 In the com
pany of
2 One's own:
comb, form
3 Composers
4 Liquid part
of blood
5 American
writer
6 Zeno of
7 Rough and
loud
8 Wrong
9 Artistic
carving .
10 Nth and
third
11 She, in
Nimes
12 Part of
A.M.A.: abbr.
13 Extinct
bird
19 Screen star
Shearer
21 Fling
25 Big cat
26 San ,
Italy
27 Jong or
Morini
28 De Carlo of
films
30 Like a very
close race
31 Contaminate
34 Woolly
beast 36 Earns as
profit
39 Turtles
that bite
42 Ladies'
companions
43 Rancher's
rope
45 Kind of gin
48 Three
sisters
of myth
50 Maternal
relatives
52 Unoriginal
54 Apple or
pear
55 Steady
56 Pewter
ingredient
58 Always
59 Small case
60 Clean, in
a way
62 Mao -
tung
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1973 by Chicago Trlbune-N.Y. Naws Synd. Irtc.
. All Rights Reserved
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