Tuesday. November 1C, 1CC0Th3 D 'y Ter r'::l3 J V J ky .- .... Slaff Wr-,r On Thursday, the UNC Circle K Club be about the business of stamping out a few butts cigarette butts that is. As part of the fourth annual Great American Smokeout, sponsored nationally by the American Cancer Society, the Circle K Club will try to get as many ciaerens smokers on campus as they can to quit smoking for at least 24 hours if not longer. Information and statistics concerning smoking will be distributed at a table set up outside the Carolina Union. Persons who smoke are urged to drop by the u pick up the available information and sisn one of. the pled; cards saying they will not smoke for at least 24 hours. UNC Head Football Coach Dick Crum, Student Cody President Cob Saunders and UNC Chancellor Christopher C. Fordhani. are among several prominent campus personalities who have endorsed the no-smoking campaign. Quitting smoking especially all of a sudden is not easy. And, for those who may Find it difficult, the American Cancer Society offers a few tips. When the urge to smoke hits you, do something else quickly. Take a deep breath and hold it. Exercise. Eat a snack. , - Announce your quitting plans to your friends, so they'll help keep you from backsliding. Get a friend to quit with you. Spend the day in mutual support. Keep your hands occupied and WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court outlawed the posting of the Ten Commandments on classroom just as the, c: :;l's ':r;:d:-. tl. n 8ssw telling us more and more that we were right all along." - Joe Grady, the Imperial Wizard of the White Knights of Liberty, said in a telephone interview from Winston-Salem that the verdict "reaffirms my belief in the judiciary of this country." "The communists attacked us in Winston Sakrn, in China Grove and 2 rain in Greensboro. We have been on the defensive," Grady said. "The jury must have worked awfully hard in sorting through all this information." y It y la tv "We. are absolutely overjoyed," national Nazi leader Harold Covington said from his office in Raleigh. "The verdicts are fantastic. It shows we can beat the system on their own ground. "The jury's decision represents the wishes of the people of North Carolina," he added. "I don't think I'm being excessively dramatic when I say the history books will say that on Nov. 3, the First shots of the second American revolution were Fired. "Tomorrow, the counterattack begins," From page 1 typically included," Morrow said. "It's not like a poetry recitation," Copeland said, "someone is sort of spilling his guts continually whether it is funny or not." Morrow has included four actors, two singers and two pianists in this production. The sequence of poems has been dispersed among them to sculpture a kind of character progression in which youth and age are pitted against each other. As of the Friday rehearsal the succession of poetry was smooth and coherent. Each poem is infused with all the sensitive eloquence and poetic emotion which was crystallized in the character of Blanche Dubois. Each poem is a complete drama in itself. The entire production has a montage effect, giving the audience fragments of personalities, situations and sexual confrontations. . . The original concept was to set some of the poems to music, Morrow said. In addition to the presentation of poetry, Morrow has inserted music into the poetic progression to "lighten the mood of some of the pieces." At first hearing, the music is pretty, sensual and translucentthe kind of melodies which would drift about a New Orleans bawdyhouse during a lazy afternoon. Some of it jangles with the blatant sexuality also encased in Williams' poetry. ...smokers pledge to quit Thursday break your automatic cigarette habits. Throw' away all your cigarettes, since you can't very well smoke them if you don't have them. , If you become desperate for a cigarette, take a long shower. It's hard to smoke there. From page 1 Covington said. "It's a whole new tactical direction for the party." He would not elaborate on his group's plans. ' Gov., Jim Hunt was out of the state Monday and a spokesman said he would have no comment on the verdict. A prominent black leader in Greensboro reacted with stunned disbelief to the acquittal. "About the only thing I can say is I'm shocked, almost speechless," said state Sen. Henry Frye, D-Greensboro. "I just don't understand it." Mark Canady, chairman of the UNC Black Student Movement, also questioned the ruling. "I don't feel it was a just decision,'.' he said. "It was a definite miscarriage of justice and it's just part of a growing trend where justice has failed, particularly against blacks." Killed in the shootings were Sandra Smith, 22, a textile worker and labor organizer from Piedmont, S.C.; James Waller, 37, a medical school graduate and CWP organizer in textile plants; Cesar Vinton Cauce, 25, a Durham hospital worker; William Sampson, 31, a former Harvard Divinity School student who, had worked in textile mills; and Michael Roland Nathan, 33, a Durham physician. walls in pub!; Dy a 3-4 vote, the nation's highest court struck down a Kentucky law that required such postings. The court's narrow . majority said in an unsigned opinion that the law violated the Constitution's guarantee of religious freedom. "The pre-eminent purpose of posting the Ten 'Commandments on schoolroom walls is plainly religious in nature," the court said in reversing a Kentucky Supreme Court ruling. "The Ten Commandments is' undeniably a sacred text 'in the Jewish and Christian faith, and no legislative recitation of a supposed secular purpose can blind us to that fact." The 1973 law provided for each posted copy to contain, in small print, this notation concerning the display's purpose: "The secular application of the Ten Commandments is clearly seen in its adoption as the fundamental legal code of Western Civilization and the Common Law of the United States." Monday's decision did not totally ban the Ten Commandm ents from p controversial 1953 ruling did not ban all Li! own The court's majority relied heavily cn a 1971 d:z:z'- ' 'hat fashioned a thrce-pron;:d test for determining v,h:th:r -:ate la-.v violates the First Amendment's "estab'.ishm'.. i of religion" prohibition. Monday's decision said the Kentucky law "has no secular legislative purpose and is therefore unconstitutional." The.;. law.-was challenged by four Louisville residents represented by the Kentucky Civil Liberties Union. Voting to strike down the law v. ere Justices William J. Erennan Jr., Byron R. White, Thurgood Marshall, Lewis F. Powell Jr. and John Paul Stevens. Eurger and Justice Harry A. Diaekmun dissented, voting instead to hold off any decision until examining the arguments more closely. Justices Potter Stewart and William H. Rehnquist said the Kentucky Supreme Court was right in upholding the law. 9 , J 'kjt iw V v Dy.ANNE PHOSSER Staff Writer The UNC Athletic Department is investigating the cost of sending the Marching Tar Heels, the University band, to the Eluebonnet Bowl in Houston, Texas. In-the meantime, the band has taken a wait-and-see attitude as to what it will do if the athletic department cannot produce the money to send the band. "We're still only in the preliminary stages of estimating the cost for 250 band members to go to Houston," UNC Athletic "Director John Swofford said Monday. He said the process could take up to two weeks, but band President Carlton Vinson said he hoped there would be a decision by Friday or Saturday. Alan Reep, assistant band director, had announced to the band during the Virginia game Saturday that the athletic department would send only 25 members to Houston. Some band members had talked about not playing in the Duke game as a protest, but the band as a whole has taken no official action. "We have two staff members in Houston checking out the arrangements and accommodations, so it's really too. early to get angry at a decision that hasn't yet been made," Swofford said. Vinson said there was a unanimous feeling in the band that either all band members would go or none would go. "Twenty-five people would just be a cry in the wilderness," he said. "We just flew off the handle because we had been told we could go to the Texas Tech or Oklahoma games, and we chose Oklahoma; then, a week and a half before the game, the athletic department said we weren't going," one band member said. "We were caught off gasrd'by the r rfc-r- V't K T" "" r i we had been te'd ever since lev, I bid talk had started th;t we would go," another band member rsli. But Vbscn said the band had-net been promised trips to Oklahoma cr a bov.lrjan:., "We just want to support the team because there are net cing to be a let cf UNC students who will be able to go," a band member said. "The Texaj land has 300 members plus there will te : I of Texas fans there. We just don't vaat to lock like no one cares about Carolina football," he said. 1 MM --. i f i i I i I i V i I f ' 'Js IS 1 I e i 6 i c v Vi i r. rS CWG GARDEN RESTAURftNT '" yIa X .a; Dine amid the art of CHna Gourmet food from all four - corners of China Pding, Szechuan.XsntorvShanshai ) Over 10Qfas-y "ll , Quality meals' Re produce Private party rooms available TAKE-OUT SERVICE AM) SPECIALS AT LUNCH " All lunches ierved with fried rice "egg f3lt;'chpe of entree and gp. Horn 2pm Monday F.'ido W At SO SeVt UfGUtAR MENU AT LUNCM J 1 l 14C1 EAST FitANKUN ST., CHAPEL HIIX942-1613 FEKING GAUDtN II ' SOUTH SQUARE MALL. DUUHAM 4 "3-3119 Lunch: Weekdays 11 am-2 pm ; Saf. & . Sun. 12-2:30 pm Dinner: 5-10 pm daily FT71 No, A !, No ! Please don 't break the glsss. It's time for Carolina Basketball again and thousands of Tar Heel I fans are looking forward to the non-televised season exhibition V opener against a strong Canadian Windsor . team on Wednesday evening, Novetr.L :r 19ih ' at Carmichce! Auditorium. AND TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE! Everyone . wants to see who'll make the Tar Heel star ting lineup. There s also il I 1 1 ; 1 i I i t i f I I i 1 1 f i '-4 I I I !' . . ll 'in r.- tint ; i.; f t a ' i - : M f ( - I 'J C) i ... I I i -.4 I t I ? I 9 THE Daily Cros by S.D. 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