Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 22, 1980, edition 1 / Page 31
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Thursday. Mar 22, 1980 Thr Tar HeH 7 news Student gets regional honor 5r V A UNC sophomore achieved the highest Southeastern score' in national mathematics competition and received an award for his accomplishment at the annual meeting of the Southeastern Section of the Mathematical Association of America. Edward J. Rak, was commended for his performance in the 40th annual William Lowell Putnam Mathematics Competition at the Math Association's meeting held April 12 at Appalachian State University. The Putnam Competition, sponsored by the association, drew more than 2,500 entrants this year from major colleges and universities. It tests undergraduates' mathematical ability with a six-hour examination. - Rak placed in the. top 2 percent among all the entrants and ranked 42nd nationally on the exam. - He graduated from Loomis Chaffee School in Connecticut and is a Morehead fellow. Rak is also a member of the Chi Psi Fraternity and a Campus Y officer. Jon Pope jfy1 , ,-A . V AUTHENTIC REASONABLE light Summer Lunches served Monday thru Saturday S - ' V ; mmMzmmwxwfri - . , , n I, Cold Plates, Antipasto Plates and Beverages td 2m a.m. Enjoy AUTHENTIC Italian Cooking at Martini's! Our patio is now open and we are serving 7 nights a week. Convenient, free parking and all ABC Permits. 205 W. MAIN ST., CARRBORO 967-4994 J i Staff photo by Jack Mohr Troll's, a firnf.Iir gathering place for UNC students ... bar to remain open under a new management agreement F roll's Bar to remain open By Gelarth Asayesh Though the Beerhall Era may be over, Troll's Bar in Chapel Hill will continue to serve as a reminder of bygone days for sometime yet. Owner Sam Shaffer scrapped plans to close the bar after Roger Meyland offered to buy half of Troll's Ltd. Shaffer will retain an interest in the business. Meyland h hen a Troll's customer since it S A III V JHy.iu.i.i... .. i nun, i .1111. WMT '1 - m'MTTirwnrtfflW 5 They are Hght weight waterproof, and comfortable. Perfect for carrying books, tennis rackets, or whatever you need for a day's outing. By Northfacc and Jansport in assorted colors. I sa Ocldoor I Sports B t CAROLINA tl , , OUTDOOR NCN8 lOptttf) sports FRANKLIN ST CH f PORTHOLE "'ALLEY - II. SinaS UP; f33Vi EL Franklin St. Upstairs above SrrutJ World Travel 942-C0C3 Hours: M-F 10-8, Sat 10-8 first oprned in 1975 and a bartender on and off sinc e August. "I didn't want to see Troll's close. I t's nice for the students to have someplace to go. Someplace they can let off some tension, drink some beer and not pay a fortune for it." Meyland said. "(Shaffer) doesn't want the business to close. . . he wanted to sell it. There's been a lot of Iressure on him every day for five years. (He has been) actively managing Troll's." he said. Shaffer's decision to sell out was not made for financial reasons, Meyland said, since Troll's has been doing well and is at the peak of its popularity. "I'd been spending too much time down here," Shaffer said. "I'm getting a year older every year and the students stay the same and it's a pace of life I couldn't keep up with." With the present arrangements. Shaffer said everything has turned out for the best. "If Troll's closed I'd miss the place and the people down here. Now I c an take the lime out of it and pursue other interests. It's the best of two lives." In spite of the shift in ownership. Meyland - said, no major changes are planned. He likes the place as it is. "It's a fairly congenial atmosphere and we try to keep it that way," Shaffer said. "Coming to Chapel Hill and opening Troll's has oeen one of the best things I ever did," he said. "I've had a great lime for the past five years and I'm looking forward to another five years." 'ifJIHIY DO 'THE HEATHEN RAGE? r PoolmG 2:1 and Acta 4:25 The great Protestant denominations were founded and developed by men who believed in The God of The Bible, that the Scriptures of The Old and New Testaments are the Infallible Word of God, the Supreme Authority for Faith and Practice. Or, in other words, "The Law and The Testimony." The Law and The Testimony, were also the basis of the 17th century Revival and Reformation, sometimes called the Puritan Reformation. The Law and The Testimony were words frequently on the lips of John Wesley, and were the great Foundation Stones of the 18th Century Revival led by Wesley, and which Revival saved England from experiences similar to those of France at the time of her Revolution when the streets of Paris ran with blood, and which Revolution was greatly contributed to by Voltaire and his cohorts as they mocked, despised, and rejected The Law and The Testimony! Not only did the Wesleyan Revival greatly bless England, but its fire, leaped across The Atlantic Ocean and kindled Itself in North America by the hands of such men as Whitfield, Asbury, Coke, Jonathan Edwards, and others, and spread rapidly over our country, producing such men in political and civil life as George Washington, Patrick Henry, etc. Through the blessings of God which have come from our rich and godly heritage we have freedom and liberty, which we have turned into "license!" The great and Inspired men of God mentioned above were all in one accord in one respect: "They believed in The God of The Bible." Not only that "it contained The Word of God," but it "was The Word of God." They ac cepted at face value the first recorded words spoken by Christ after His baptism by John, and The Holy Spirit visibly descending upon Him from heaven in the form of a dove: "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by 'EVERY WORD' that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." Mat thew and Luke 4:4. As a result of the Puritan Revival and the Wesleyan Revival in the American colonies, and later the states, many of God's laws were written on our statute books and still there, though scorned and mocked at by many today as "blue laws," outmoded and out of date, etc. These laws were put there without serious objection by a population that was about 75 or more non-professing Christians. Today the picture is just about reversed, with about 75, or a little less, professing to be Christian, we see the laws of God being taken off our statute books, or compromised, or watered down to where they mean almost nothing to the morality of our times! In the Second Psalm God says: "Ask of Me, and I shall give Thee the heathen for Thine inheritance." This was ad dressed to "His King He set up," but surely it is ap propriate and pleasing to God for us to make this same prayer in Christ's Name, for His sake! P.O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 Imported Cloisonne Blazer Buttons V in Carolina Blue & White encircled in gold r v 1 . , . -- - I r tv j-t; i i i 1 mi -if Old Well Music Box Plavs "Hark the Sound" in antique finish wood... Downtown" Franklin 942-4563
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 22, 1980, edition 1
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