1 f 4The Daily Tar HeelTuesdav. October 13 Public sericc announcement mut be turned inio Ihe box outside Dili offices in the Carolina Union by noon if thvs aie u run the nol dav. I ach item will be run al least twice. TODAY'S ACTIVITIES lleitr mm control and fort-tea potto experts drsrvsv "WetKuX lb AWACS A Diplomatic Dilemma." at 4 p.m. in MX) Hamilton Hall. Question and answer period to follow. Moderator: Professor James leule. chairman. Peace. War. -and IX'fensc. Program sponsored by Peace. War. and Defense. Student Government, and Americans for Common Sense. I tie Prr-PnifrssMtniil Health Society will meet al 7 p.m. in IOf Berryhill Hall. The speaker will be from the School of PuWic Health. All interested persons are invited to attend. Interviewing Workshop, sponsored by the University Place ment Service, will be held at 7 p.m. in 2I0 Hanes Hall. Ac tivities based on the Skills Guide available in 211 Hanes will help you prepare for job interviews. UNC CoHf Republicans will meet at 8 p.m. tonight in 217 Union. The Blark Student Movement Political Committee meeting will be held at 5 p.m. in Upenda Lounge. Campus Y Committee on Energy and riivironmenl will hold an organizational meeting for ecologically active Green-peace. Green-peace will be on campus October 27-29. If you are in terested in helping or joining Green-peace, please come to the Campus Y building (downstairs) at 2:30 p.m. BSM Membership Committee will meet at 4 p.m. in the BSM office, Suite A Union. All interested persons please at tend. There will be a GPSF Senators meeting at 5:30 p.m. in 224 Union. Bring your favorite poems and original work to an open poetry reading sponsored by Di and Phi at 8 p.m. in 400 New East. AXE will bold a called meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 222 Venable. mm Ct rr i - - moo -tv LJ ) mm The North Carolina Student I legislature will have an impor tant meeting al 7 p.m. in 226 Union. I'inal plans for the legislative reception will be nude. Anyone interested in politics i invited. Members, be there. The Academic Procedures Committee of Student Govern ment will conduct a brief staff meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the Frank Porter Graham Lounge of the Union. Please be prompt. The Christian Science Organization at UNC will tiold its weekly meeting at 2 p.m. in 205 Union. All are welcome. What do Dr. Martha Nell Hardy and Ihe Orange County Women's Association have in common? They will both speak to the Association for Women Students at 7:30 p.m. in 207 Union. Everyone is invited. The executive committee of AKI) will meet at 5:30 at the NCMH cafeteria. The Association of Business Students will present NCNB Corp. for a seminar, "Careers in Banking." at 7:30 p.m. Tues day in G-9 New Carroll. Refreshments will be served. HS1CS will meet al 7:30 p.m. in 202 Union. We will discuss STDs and organizational information. Mandatory meeting for all new trainees! Isabella W. Cannon, former mayor of Raleigh, will speak to the UNC Young Democrats at 8 p.m. in the Union. She will speak on: "Can the Democratic Party Survive the '80s: A Challenge to the YDs." COMING EVENTS ' UNC Ice Hockey will have a very short, very important organizational meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday in 222 Greenlaw. The Global Issues Committee of the Campus Y will have an organizational meeting at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in 207 Union. All members please attend. BSM Ebony Onyx Theatre will meet at. 7:30 p.m. Wednes day in Craige Rec. Room. Come prepared to perform your pieces memorized. wnn nTfT r nrr"" lit iii J6s. LTu "Tlie New Church and Ihe Struggle for Human Rights in Central America" is the topic of a presentation that Dr. William Wipllcr, director of Ihe Human Rights office of the national Council of Churches, will give al 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Community Church on Purfoy Road. The presentation is being sponsored by the Carolina Committee on Central America and Critical Perspectives. PmfexMtr U, Dieter. University of Graz, and Professor J. Ahrens, University of Kiel, will speak of the "Difficulties in the Generation of Uniform Random Numbers on Computers" at 4 p.m. Thursday in 107 Smith Building. . The Anglican Student Fellowship's Holy Communion is at 10 p.m. Wednesday in the Chapel of the Cross. Participants in the New York Pilgrimage will tell their tales and fellowship time will continue afterward. All are welcome. ' The Undergraduate History Association will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in 569 Hamilton Hall. Professor William S. Powell will give a slide presentation on the history of The University of North Carolina. Everyone is welcome. , ITEMS OF INTEREST Come to Kaffeeklatsch. Speak German in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere every Thursday afternoon from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Newman Center. All levels of speakers are welcome. There will be Kaffeeklatsch Thursday Oct. 15. Inlramurals: Second of three mandatory volleyball referee clinics from 7-9 p.m. Also, first of two mandatory soccer referee clinics from 7-9 p.m. in 304 Woollen Gym. Inlramurals: "Modified" instant scheduling for IM soccer concludes tomorrow. Team captains are. signing up for a seat league for ihe regular season. Team captains not signed up by tomorrow should contact soccer coordinator Beverly Jarrell immediately. Pre-Med Pre-Dent Pre-Vet Students come to an interview ing skills workshop from 7-9:30 p.m. Thursday. Be prepared for your professional school interne. Sign up at 202-D Steele Building. UN'C students will walk 20 miles to raise money to Fight .airftaifhtnl Amencan Cancer Soaefy. LiO swswwjfwi ,,' it .K'l -Mli.;. . V naWI MaMaf mmm0r Schlitz Brewing Co.. Milwaukee, Wl rD r pt rn b m wt. m mim aw w : - - a jr (J multiple sclerosis at 9 a.m. Oct. 25 from Olde Campus. Students from Olde Campus housing area and elsewhere will lv stvkiiif! pk'dj-'cs fur mile u;ilkcd. Please liclp.iis IIi-Ih Ms Dr. Jan Taue of Brown University will speak on "Picose cond Electronic Relaxations in Amorphous Semiconductors" at 4 p.m. Oct. 21 in 265 Phillips Hall, Cofree and lea will be served at 3:30 p.m. in 277 Phillips Hall. Offender Aid and Restoration, a non-profit organization serving inmates in the Durham County Jail, will conduct a vol unteer training session at 6:30 p.m. on Oct, 26 and 28, at the First Presbyterian Church in Durham. For more information call 933-3526. PACE (Professional and Administrative Career Examination), the examination for many federal jobs, will be given between Oct. 28 and Dec. 12 in many N.C. cities. Applications must be turned in before Tuesday to the University Placement Service, 21 1 Hanes Hall. If more than 25 people turn in applications to the Placement Service, the examination win be given on the UNC-CH campus. Otherwise it will be scheduled for selected cities in N.C. Applications in 21 1 Hanes Hall or 101 Nash Hall. The Carolina Union Gallery Committee is sponsoring "Ashes and Diamonds," an exhibition of Polish film placards. The exhibit will run until Oct. 22 in the Union Gallery. Student Health Service is offering a four-week "For Men Only: Holistic Weight Management" workshop emphasizing positive lifestyle behavior in a supportive group setting. Enroll ment is limited to UNC male students less than 25 pounds overweight. To pre-register call 966-2281 (Ext. 275) to arrange for a pre-screening interview. Snow Skiing Course (PHYA 10) Learn to downhill ski and earn physical education credit at the same time. Course taught in Boone over Christmas break. For more information, contact Mary bell Avery in 1 10 Woollen Gym or call 962-2124. Journalism majors lxoking for experience? Staff posi tions for the Southern Part of Heaven? are available. Come by the SCAU office in Suite B or call 962-8313. Need enthusiastic, creative RTVMP or journalism majors to compile, direct and edit programs for cable TV. Come by SCAU office in Suite B or call 962-8313. nrr T?nnn LuMkiu mJ J f &S)lMWiiU- 22M UNC 'Symphony Orchestra holds fsFst concert tonight The UNC Symphony Orchestra, con ducted by David Serrins, will give its first concert of the year at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Hall Auditorium. . r The pieces to be performed are quite varied in content. The opening work will be Debussy's quiet and programmatic "Prelude, Afternoon of a Faun." The second work performed will be an all-string piece, Bartok's "Divertimento for String Orchestra." MMH9fl)llajajggjgpaJ JuLd J UlJUIJ LjULo uuLs . . n nnrfirn nnnr "7 nPTfiPt "7 vav,. LiL.iLiV.ritJi,J ti t... a ha ILJ ki aJ L Ll W II Lj Id wf Jos. The third piece will be Sibelius' "2nd Symphony," a work for a fairly large or chestra with full brass, woodwinds and tympani. ? , i The UNC Symphony Orchestra is com posed of undergraduate music-majors, students in other majors, a few graduate students and some townspeople brought in to fill the instrumental chairs not taken by students. The UNC Symphony Or chestra performs four concerts each school year, two each semester. GOT A GRIPE? CALL CHUCK JAMES DTH OMBUDSMAN 962-0245 Schlitz Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wl