2Th3 Daily Itt HeelTuesday. September 1 6, 1 SSO
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Cy DOH.MAN
Siff Writer
The UNC Cancer Kestcrch Center has received .$9.2
million for the construction of a new facility to be
completed by 1503." -
More than 4.6 million in private gifts,' a federal
grant of $1.4 million and $3.2 million awarded by the
UNC Doard of Governors will fund construction of the
facility.
Mimi' Minkcff, administrative assistant for the
Cancer Research Center said the facility will house the
administrative offices and' a laboratory, for the five
existing programs in the center.
"For the first time all the staff members in the
Cancer Research Center will be working together in one
building," Mlnkcff said.
. H. Ehelton Earp, assistant director of the center said
it would derive information from the research that
would be applicable to cases of human cancer.
"We will devise new therapies as the program
expands from patient analyses," Earp said. "The
center will utilize information in studying the detection,
cause and prevention of cancer."
The new 65,000-square-foct facility will be built next
to the Faculty Laboratory Office Building across from
the UNC School 'of Dentistry.
1 UNC Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III said
there would be an exchange of information between the
research center and N.C. Memorial Hospital.
"The prospective realization of this important
project is a tribute to the faculty and quality of their
research,' Fcrdham said.
Fordham, former dean of the UNC School of
Medicine, Stuart Eondurant, professor and dean of the
UNC School of Medicine, and the Medical .Co
Founders Club led the fund-raising effort for the
center's new facility.
The UNC School of Medicine has received a $129,000 federal grant to
establish and maintain a family medicine program at the school, a spokesman
for Sen. Robert Morgan, D-N.C. announced Monday.
The grant, which is one of 39 given to medical schools nationwide for
family medicine programs, was provided by the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services.
From pasa 1 : .w WwUww From pags i OPEC minhtero disagree about price plan
"The numbers are just there. They don't
mean anything without an agreement," he
said. y
Under existing parking statutes, the
University is free to regulate all parking on
campus.
"The chancellor or his delegate can decide
that certain areas ought to be used for certain
thirds," Ehrmghaus said.
I iowever, she added that if . students
already have received permits for a given
zone, she knows of no procedure that will
allow them to be towed from it.
Therefore, students who decide to leave
their cars in the Scott College lot can not
legally be forced to move, even if the Scott
College Council decides to agree to alumni
parking there, she said.
In order for the foundation to obtain
authority over the spaces without Scott
College's consent, it would have to petition
John Temple, vice chancellor for business
and finance, and then the chancellor's office.
If Scott College residents decide to give the
spaces to the. foundation on each football
Saturday from 9:30 a.m. until after the game,
their agreement will only be effective this
season.
Next year, Smith said his office would
work with old and new officers and try to
establish a similar agreement.
If Scott College agrees to the exchange,
residents without passes to the Navy field
would have to find alternative parking or be
towed, Smith said. .
If students don't agree, however, Smith
said that the Educational Foundation would
petition the chancellor for the spaces next
year.
"If we have to do it on our own, we may
not make the spaces on Navy Field
available," she said. ';
"We're in the beginning stages of
involvement in fund raising for the Student
Athletic Center. We've got to raise $30
million," Smith said. "In order to attract,
donations of that magnitude, you've got to
attract big donors.
"We can give them a permanently
assigned, numbered space. For busy people,
that's something really nice to have," he said.
He said that some people might contribute
$25,000 or more toward the athletic center in
exchange for a guaranteed space so near
Kenan Stadium.
m m
Spaces now available to Rams Club
members during football games are the Rams
Gub lot, spaces on the north side between the
Bell Tower and Teague,' The Bell Tower lot,
spaces on the southside near the Student
Health Service and spaces near the field
house end of the stadium. To become a Rams
Club member, a person must have donated
money to the athletic department.
The hospital parking deck and spaces
behind Peabody Hall are also available to
them.
Rams Club members used to have spaces
where the new Tin Can, the Intramural Field,
the new track and the new library are now
located.
"We've really lost a whole lot of spaces
and gained a lot of Rams Club members,"
Smith said. Rams Club membership is now at
4,400.
From page 1
became deficient in basic foods," he said.
"That situation has been reversed, and most
Iranians are now beticr'off."
Most Americans are faced with problems
of perspective and confused values when they
try to understand Iran, Eaton said.
He pointed to the question of land
redistribution as a primary example of
different values and of Iran's own struggle to
define its future.
"It is probably inevitable that land held by
foreign agribusiness is reverting back to the
clergy," Eaton said. "Americans do not
associate that with progress, but we must
understand the immense suffering and
dislocation that occurred under the shah. To
Iranians, agribusiness is a much greater evil
than clerical feudalism."
The land issue is a microcosm for Iran's
whole struggle to redefine its destiny, Eaton
said. "The conflict between the traditional
and the modern is the critical issue, the center
point of the greater conflict," he said. "This
cannot easily be understood from a Western
viewpoint."
"The rapid growth of the game makes me
feel warm inside," Zucchino said. "I'm not
even 30 yet and my life is over as far as what I
want to accomplish."
Play begins in heats of six. The top three
finishers in each game advance, with the field
being cut in half in each round. Since there is
room for only four courses, play is slow in
early rounds. But the momentum builds until
the top six reach the finals.
In Sunday's Havoc Classic, the legends of
the game "Country" Dan, his brother
T.C., "Rico" and Keith "Jar Head"
Richardson were eliminated in the second
round. Founding Father Moose Pulley did
make it to the finalSj finishing second.
It was Frank Phoenix's day. Phoenix, a
member of the host Henry's Heroes team,
said, "Winning was nice." But the Chapel
Hill engineer added, "4 just like to come out,
drink a little beer and play some croquet."
It wasn't a good day, croquet-wise, for
Collins or the Jones Street Boys. "Country"
Dan, winner of the last tournament for an
unprecedented fifth title, and "Rico"
Zucchino stood on the sidelines as Phoenix,
Pulley and the other finalists battled it out.
But deep down, neither cared. They had
just spent six hours on a beautiful Chapel Hill
Sunday quaffing a few brews, carousing with
old friends and generally having one whale of
. a time. -
VIENNA, Austria (AP) Ministers from the world's oil cartel, opening a
special meeting to prepare an ambitious long-range price plan, disagreed
Monday over short-term prices, production levels and who should chair the
meeting.
"One cannot expect full accord on all these points," Indonesia's oil
minister, Dr. Subroto, told reporters.
Oil, finance and foreign ministers of the 13-nation Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries met in an ornate white and gold ballroom to
draw up a plan to push oil prices up every three months to keep up with world
inflation and other factors.
The plan aims to boost the price from the current S32 a barrel to the level
where oil costs the same as alternate fuels, which OPEC estimates at $60. The
ministers proposed different indexes for measuring inflation rates.
Iranian parliament prepares for debate
Iran's Parliament prepared on Monday to open debate on the American
hostages amid renewed calls for spy trials and a U.S. apology. A major
Canadian newspaper said that secret negotiations for release of the 52
Americans have been under way for three months in an effort to solve the
crisis before the U.S. presidential elections.
President Jimmy Carter, speaking in Corpus Christi, Texas, said recent
statements by Iranian officials "might very well lead to resolution" of the
10-month-old crisis. It was not clear whether Carter had been informed by
then of Iran's reiteration Monday that the United States must apologize for
past actions.
Omission of an often-stated apology demand from a list of conditions
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini announced last Friday had raised hopes in
some quarters that the chances of solution to the crisis had improved.
"1 f -1 (
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' X.. . :
510 W. FRANKLIN STREET
929-0263
I M I idt t i i ii J I . MvimatiM f iiumioi i f iwdm t
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i- . DO YOU iliLiU MO
V-"-? we are BUYING GOLD
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WE ARE BUYING DIAMONDS J .
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ALSO RUBIES, EMERALDS
AND SAPPHIRES
0
We-are now buying CLASS RINGS, DENTAL GOLD, WEDDING
BANDS, GOLD COINS, GOLD JEWELRY, SILVER JEWELRY, AN
THING MARKED 10K, 14K, 18K GOLD or 999. We test unmarked
gold.
CLASS KINGS
L&rge 37g
fledlum 22g
Sraall 223
riin! IC3
1411
254.56
192.64
151.35
It.i
157.50
144.23
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WEDDING UANDS
K-Largs 15o
Large 12g
Medium 9g '
Small 7g
Mini 5a
103.20
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61.92
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3S.40
79.50
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37.10
25.50
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR STERLING SILVER
OR SILVER COINS
Pre-1964 10 oz. or Less- 10oz. Silver Dollars 13 each Kennedy Halves
Silver Coins 10-20 oz.- 10.50 oz. (Circulated) 1965-1969
10,25per dollar 20-30 oz.- 11. CQoz. Silver Dollars 15 each 1.50 for each .50 piece
30 oz. or more- 12.00 oz. (Extra Fine)"""
Silver Dollars 20 and up
(mint)
For well-preserved, intact gold jewelry, well pay a premium price.
i we guarT ' ' i
ADVERTISED PRICES. Bring in any of our com-:
ipatilor's ads and we'll give you a higher price.
Navajo Trading Post has been established in the Triangle area since 1977. Our
first store opened on 9th Street in Durham in 1977, and our Franklin Street loca
tion opened in May.
;$ Court St.
712 Ninth St.
Durham
510 f'fnk!in St.
' Char! Ili'l
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9 JBfck
From paga 1
days longer to get it from Norfolk to here The mechanical action of the pipes begins
than it did to get to the states from by pushing down a pedal or key. A rod,
Germany."
But Quinn said he is pleased with the work
of the Kleuker group. "They are true
artisans," he said. "This is not an assembly
line kind of thing."
"We see it as an instrument of mission and
ministry," Lee said. "If it were not for the
University, and particularly the music
department, we would not have been as
interested in this project."
"We've had student help from those very
involved with the parish, also from fraternity
houses across the street," Quinn said.
"Unloading the truck was the crucial thing."
Rexhausen agreed. "There were five
windchests at 500 pounds each that had to be
brought up," he said. "We had great help
from students and appreciate their
rnciripmt inn. V - m
The new organ was necessary Quinn said, 5 IorS process, he s-.J. "It too I, jr months
to replace the old organ installed in 1925. The for a crew to build it in our shep. - "
old organ "was designed when organs Dut the new organ will be more than worth
weren't being designed to play organ music, ' the wait Quinn sa5d- "ur old oran was
only transcriptions of other music," he Cadillac in the sense of organ builders, but no
explained. Parts of the new organ were one thinks much of Cadillacs anymore,"
selected because they could resist climate he said. "The new one is three times larger
changes and humidity, he said. and fits into the same space."
attached to a "tracker," a long strip of metal
or wood, carries the force to the pipes to
produce sound.
"The modern electric prgans turned the
organ into a machine rather than a work of
art, a true musical instrument," Quinn said.
"It was basically making music by remote
control."
Rexhausen said he is delighted with the
progress so far. "Every time it is so new for
us," he said. "Every organ Is so different.
This organ is designed to produce old French
and German Baroque music. But it is only a
medium size, with 37 stops. We installed one
in June with 93 stops, the largest we have ever
"done."
Rexhausen said he hoped the installation
would be complete i two morthtv-It is a
1 - 1 -f.
All Faculty end Staff
Welcome
Room 02 Carolina Union
Today 12:30-2:C0
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