.-"'1
' snt
ftibhc isrvice announcements must be turned m at the box outside the DTH offices in the Carolina Union
by 1 p m. if thev are to run the next dav Each item will be run at least twice.
IOSHVS At'imiit
C nrpooi lor I Hk tandk-ligtit VikH in Kjktjtn will meet
JownMdirN in the Union ai ft p.m. Uring a I'jnJW.
Th IV Media Board will meet ai 5 p.m. in K Cireen
law. Inter icwo will be conJticicd.
The Amrrkan Vxicl of Personnel Administrator pre
sents t)r. William Bijjoness speaking on "Labor Orjcania
Imhi m the South." Afterwards ibe club will hae a er
important meeting to plan the April Chartering ceremony at
7 p.m. in T-5 of Carroll Hall. !
ThcSCA will hateits wccU meeting at 7:30 p.m. in room
A at the Chapel of the Cross. All are invited.
Carolina (. AsMtcialitMi Businrvt Merlin at 7:30 p.m.
in 301 Dey Hail.
Last chance to help decide on the food service you deserve
at UNC. Last open hearings are Monday at 7 p.m. in Mor
rison Lounge and Wednesday at 3 p.m. in rooms 202-204 of
the Union.
Tn Undergraduate Hislon Association presents Dr. Carl
Pletsch speaking on "Love joy Killjoy: The History of Ideas
and Intellectual History." Everyone is welcome at 8 p.m. in
569 Hamilton Hall.
Krvaror Dcsijt and Job-Set king Tactic Workshop wilt be
offered by the University Placement Services at 2 p.m. in 108
Hanes Hall. Activities on the Skills Guide (available in 211
Hanes) such as identifying skills, planning your job hunt and
writing your resume will be covered.
Amnesty international, the Nobel Prize-winning human
right organization, has a local chapter which will meet at 8
p.m. in the Newman Center.
Service" for
tntrmird in working in Student (im era meat? ill out an
application and be interviewed an tunc between I p.m. and
p. in hi Suite C of the Union.
COMt; t. KMS
I he Hunger Action Committer will hold a meeting in
room 103 of the Campus V Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. Plans to
eliminate world hunger by fall break will be completed.
Am one interested in finding out how to come and help w ith
hunter. cme Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. to 103 of the Campus Y.
Minorities In Maw Media will hold a meeting in the ttih
floor lounge of llinton James to elect officials and discuss
the A&T conferences.
Representatives of a Study Abroad Program in Denmark
w hich emphasies businevs administration w ill be on campus
to meet w ith interested students on Tuesday from I JO to 2:30
p.m. in room 204 of the Carolina Union. All interested stu
dents should attend this informal session.
Come for some fellowship and offer praise to God with us
at l ull Gospel Student Fellowship. We meet in the Union at 7
p.m. on Tuesday.
" The Association of Business Students Career Planning
Committer will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 306 Hanes.
IX'OS. the campus environmer'al group, will have a meet
ing Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in 204 of the Union. Everyone, in
terested in the environment is welcome.
"Bikin" if and I Jkio' if ... bring your bicycle, road rally,
bike registration, displays and demonstrations of bicycle
safety, security, maintenance and recreation. Meet in the Pit
Tuesday front 2 to 6 p.m.
The executive comWm ef UNC Vewsg DnMcnta will
student
A memorial service was held Sunday
at the Newman Center for Malcolm Wayne
Par ding ton, the UNC student who was
found dead Tuesday night at Swensen's
Ice Cream Factory in Chapel Hill.
Pardington, 19, of 112 Hannah St.,
Carrboro, was a sophomore business ad
ministration major and an employee of
Swensen's. His death was ruled an acci
dental asphyxiation from nitrous oxide
by Dr. Jerome Tift, the medical examiner.
Surviving are his mother, Cariey Williams
Pardington of Carrboro; his father, Ed
ward Davies Pardington of Winston
Salem; two sisters, Cariey Walker of
Chapel Hill and Celia Pierce of Green
ville, N.C.; two brothers, Stephen Par
dington and Joe Pardington, both of
Carrboro; maternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Williams of Carrboro; and
paternal grandmother, Doris Pardington
of Winston-Salem.
TRACY FORD
meet at i: 0 p.m. IimxI.o in the I moil, t luxk activities
sheet loi room number. Anyone interested in rtiunine lot an
open pOMlion plcjsc come. I vcryonc is invited.
I'M ' Wer Ski t.lun w ill meet in 2iN Gardner on I ticsd.it
at X p.m. Kcviimcrs welcome. Kemcmhcr your checkbook!
The Cndrrgradaair Potiiksrf Science Aoctation w ill meet
I ucsday at X p.m. in room 207 of the Carolina Union. Jim
Smith of the University Counseling Center will talk about
summer job opportunities, deadlines and the Pl-.P program.
Come and ask questions.
lie. I). Kkfcardx of me department ufstaSstk at I NC will
hold a colloquium on "Invariant Differential Operators and
Zonal Operators and Zonal Polynomials" Tuesday at 3:30
p.m. in Phillips 324. Refreshments will be served at 3 p.m. in
Itiillips 31ft.
I he ( iimpus Governing Council will meet Tuesday at 6:30
p.m. in 217 of the Union. All organizations planning to re
quest money during budget proceedings need to attend and
give a two-minute presentation. The budget process will be
explained.
CHLC. the I ofllracrrwive Health Education Clinic hold
ing an inlormal and anonymous small group discussion class
on Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Health Education Suite on 2nd.
floor of Student Health Center.
tTKMS OF INTKRfcST
The I'NC Reading Program offers individually tailored
programs to improve your reading and study skills, no
matter what your current level may be. If you were unable to
enroll in the fall or were on the waiting list, we now have
spaces available, including evening hours. Come by 204-205
Phillips Annex or call 933-3782 for more information.
ATTENTION JUNIORS AND SENIORS taking graduate
rnoui entrance exams this spring. Enroll now in the I NC
READING PROGRAM to allow time for adequate prepa
ration. We offer individual instruction and flexible hours,
including evening sessions. There is no fee for students pre
viously enrolled in the program. Come by 204 Phillips Annex
or call V33-37K2.
A symposium on the Anthropological implications of evo
lutionary theory, sponsored by the Dept. of Anthropology,
will be held March second and third, at 10 a.m. in the More
head Planetarium Monday, and in Gerrard Hail at 2:30 p.m.
Tuesday. ,l)r. George Stocking, an anthropologist from the
University of Chicago, will present a lecture "Apes, Grand
fathers and Rubtcens. Dr. Andirenne Zihlman, an anthro- "
pologist from the University of California at Santa Cm,
wiS talk on "Theoretical Constraints on Models of Human
Ancestry." at 2-3 p.m. March 2 in Gerrard Hall. IV. i.H.
Crook, a psychologist from the University of Bristol, Eagiamf.
will re Heel on "Evolution ef Identity ia Human Social
Transactions" on Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. in the MP Eaculty
Lounge. Dr. 1.. SJobodUin, an ecologist from the Stale Uni
versity of New York at Stony Brook, will discuss "Evolution
as a Force in History " at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in Gerrard Hall.
The UNC Media Board is still accepting applications for
editors and business managers thru S p.m. Friday. Applica
tions should be submitted to Box 1 3, in the Union. Interviews wjll
be held next week.
Pardington
Schoql.BoLj
Jl
9 ...
't?
C
9 different frame colors
Sunsensors $15.00 Gradient & Clear $8.00
."4-t
155 E. Franklin Street
VISA MASTERCARD
or open a personal
VsA charge account
toda
THE' Daily CroSSWOHl CyHsrberlESmSSh .
ACROSS
1 Fracture
aid
5 Ukraine
city
9 Savory
plant
13 Oil: comb,
form
14 Rsfuge
13 Cewr.wCr.cd
17 Legal
Instrument
20 Apprehend,
In a way
21 Fencing
strokes
22 Teut.
23 of
execution
Affirmed
24
23 Security,
In law
23 Thrash
32 Rio da
la
33 Mexican
coin
34 Tidal wave
35 Confeder
ates 33 Heraldic
term
33 Midday
40 Flattered
41 Way: ebbr.
42 Lumber
measure:
abbr.
43 Rapid
44 Dutch
painter
Yesterday's Puzzla Served:
if ;
M
t
I
in
Mi
s f
J
i i ) !
'
J ,
) - -
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i -
I a I v I i
,-lH -4 '
1
3 i i UTJS
3211
45 Language:
abbr.
43 Calm
43 Element
found in
platinum
ore
54 Protests
gulit
57 "When I
was "
53 Brightness
53 Out of work
CO Not any:
dial.
61 Smail
amount
62 Burden
DOWN
1 Constabu
lary 2 Fragrant
wood
3 Stitched
4 Digits
5 Plundered
6 Thin cake
7 OeanSp.
8 Humor
9 Relentless
one
10 Siavecf
old
11 Rim spool
12 Darks
15 Social
standing
13 Overcoat
19 Gem
23 Black buck
of Nepal
24 berth
25 Factory
23 Bret
27 Feminine
suffix
23 Stupefy
23 Fine
cretonne
33 robbery.
31 In want
33 Certain
teachers,
for short
34 Cheese
33 Infinite
37 Certain
church
42 Musical
group
43 Malay
skirt
44 RsckSsss
45 Flax cloth
43 Arch
47 Ms Grasso
43 Bring up
0 tzUn, to
Scctsmsn
China
51
52
WW IVVI
3
Rimsrd .
5 Symbol for
Jesus
3 Recent:
corr.b. form
I!
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T" "'mL' T" """""" T
,tlil tf Chicago Tfitjune-N.Y. ti .-.S t,f J. I.-.C
All tV'tn HcserycJ
is
,4
-?.
M( t l Medical tiiiegr dmissiion lest) Apul 4. IV I
I oti dollar applications iiuii lx- rxKtinarkcd iui l.iici than
Match 6. there arc m Lilc rcvwradim lees. NcM and iiit.il
'.tesiiit! I tall t K2 is Sept. 12. AppliciHHtiis in MlSmiili
liiiildine ind Mil N.nli Hall.
"Words. Khtthm and Rhnic." a poclrs coiilest. is heme
NpoiiMticd h the Alio HK-iican Sludics iiriKuliiin and
HiiKk Ink. Siihinil up to lvc poems li4)2 Alumni Itiiildiui:
m ihc-HSM ollicc. (all v3tJ52X li contest emdcluics
l-ntrs deadline s Match 2V I'rtes ill be awarded.
I he Miidmt tlnie t.t nrral is mm accept inj! applica
tions lot the jHtMlioiis ol asMsianl attorney general. Appli
canons max be picked up in Suite t ol the Studci! I iimhi
March 2-March 16. Yihi ulo will have to Mgu up loi an
intcnicw. Applicaiionv arc due March 16.
Sophomores and jununs ate encouraged to apply lor the
C LASS of "315 Summer Iravel (.rants. Three $XW I clkm
ships will he awarded. Applications are available at the
International Center. Student Union. Deadline is March 16.
Applications are now available for chairperson positions
lor the 1VXI-X2 C arolina lliuon. Applications at the Union
desk. ' - t
last call for seniors interested in competing for the Mangtim
Mrdid in Oralr on March 23 and 24. I nlr forms arc
available at the Union desk and lobby of the Campus V and
must be returned by March 5.
Sign-ups are open until spring break lor craft workshops
bring held from March 17-21 in basketry, weaving, paper
making and textile processes, silk screen and direct dye. l or
only $2 you can learn how to do something new in two or ,
three hours. C heck at the Union desk for information.
Any student interested in working with KHA next year
should stop by the RH A office (Suite A Carolina Uniot and
nil out an application by Friday. Positions are open for
committee chairpersons and members.
IM RAMl RAl.S ... IM basketball Wednesday is the
second of two mandatory meetings for IM softball captains
at 7 p.m. in MM Woollen Gym. Friday is the deadline for
entering IM softball. one-on-one basketball, team racquet
ball, and more.... Call Bert Woodard at Woollen Ciym for
more information.
OT1 71 -7?
CI 71 i1 -T9
Monday, March 2, 1981 The Daily Tar Heel3
TrnrrTY linitfii nci'' r
Two children who were in critical con
dition last week after being hit by a car
Wednesday were listed in stable condition
at North Carolina Memorial Hospital
Sunday.
NCMH information officer James
Bicket said there had been little improve
ment in their condition during the 24-hour
period from Saturday until Sunday.
The children, Christopher Kilpatrick,
10, and Lance Badgett, 8, were taken off
the critical list Friday.
They were hit while watching a Bud
weiser Clydesdale exhibition at University
Mall. Kilpatrick suffered head injuries
and a broken leg, and Badgett had chest
injuries, a broken arm and a broken leg,
Bicket said
Erica Kendall, 6, who was also struck
by the car, was listed in fair-to-good con
dition Sunday. She had a broken pelvis.
Five other people were taken to NCMH
following the accident Wednesday but all
had been released by Sunday.
Chapel Hill Police Chief Herman Stone
said the car's accelerator apparently got
stuck as it pulled from a parking space
near the exhibition. The car, a 1972 Buick,
was driven by Mildred Cheek Cox of
Chapel Hill. It struck at least ten people,
one witness said.
Two of the Clydesdale horses were in
jured but not seriously.
No charges had been filed Sunday, but
the case was still under investigation by
the Chapel Hill Police Department.
DIANE LUPTON
u
Applications for the chairpersons posi
tions of the 1981-1982 Carolina Union
Activities Board arc now available at the
Union Information Desk.
Chairpersons are needed for the film,
forum, gallery, human relations, publi
city, recreation, social, special projects
and videotape committees.
Any regularly enrolled student is eligi
ble to apply and can contact Carolina
Union President-elect Larry Ellis for
more information.
Applications are due March 20.
J
OPEN 24 HOURS
Savin Copies 6x11 Vt
or Legal size 5t Special
Price
Taylor Cellars Burgundy 1.5LS3.61
Taylor Cellars Chablis 1.5L $3.61
Taylor Cellars Rhine .1.5L $3.61
Taylor Cellars Rose .'. 1.5L $3.61
Atrijaden Mountain Burgundy 1.5L $3.83
Almaden Mountain ChabBs .1.5L $3.83
Almaden Mountain Rose 1.5L $3.83
Almaden Mountain Rhine 1.5L $3 83
IngJenook Navalle Burgundy 1.5L $3.70
Ingtenook Navalle Chablis ,: 1.5L $3.70
Inglenook Navalle Rose .7. 1 .5L $3.70
Inglenook Navalle Rhine 1.5L $3.70
Duplin N.C. Scuppemong .750ML $2.33
Duplin N.C. Carlos .750ML $Z33
Duplin N.C. Rose 750ML $2.33
Lancers Rose 750ML $3.49
Lancers Rufeo 750ML $3.49
Lancers Branco .750ML $3.49
Cheap Case Prices
on Beer & Wine
Wholesale & Retail Ice Sales 50 Lb. Bag
Keg & Ice Delivery
Greenville-Chapel Hill
752-8772 967-9791
CI
r
fVUT Tin (Willi i i
Tho Carolina Union Golloy Ccmmiiteo
present!
CRAFT WORKSHOPS
Basketry, off-loom weaving, paper making,
fabric painting
March 16-21
Workshop descriptions, times and signups at tho
Union Desk
SIGN UP NOW!
DO YOU
NEED MONEY?
- - - - .rr
WE PAY MORE FOR YOUR
GOLD AND SILVER! WHY?...
WANT YOUR BUSINESS
ri- k Buying CLASS RINGS v v -
WGOLD & SILVER JEWELRY and WEDDING BANDS.
Anything 10K, 14K, 18K GOLD!
WE PAY TOP PRICE
and
test unmarked gold
Now offering
WHIPPETS
Bongs
Rolling Papers
Adult Comics
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Open 7 days a week
510 W. Franklin
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OF THE BOOK OF YOUR CHOICE
WITH PRESENTATION OF THIS AD.
START YOUR VACATION IN THE
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SALES FLOOR. .
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7 DAYS A WEEK
SERVING:
BREAKFAST
. 11PM-11AM'
FEATURING:
olo Wheat Pancakes French Toast
Bagels Ci Cream Cheese Omelets
24 HOURS OF
CHAPEL HILL'S FINEST
SALAD BAR!
BURGERS SANDWICHES
SOUPS
BACK SIDE of UNIVERSITY SQUAUK
IN FRONT (if GRANVU.I.F. TOWERS
tit aMU n n ((0 j Jl(l 0)
Nothing goes better with a great roundbaSI game than a great
roundbail meal from PTA! And wd'U do tho travelling !
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