4rThe Daily Tar HeelFriday. September Campus Gvlenimk Public service announcements must be turned into the box outside DTH offices in the Carolina Union by noon if they are to run the next dav. Fach item will be run at least twice. TODAY'S ACTIVITIES Ttw Drpwlmm of Computer Srirncr will hold a collo quium by John A. Sharp of the University of Swansea, United Kingdom at 2 p.m. in 212 Phillips. Y-den your Horizons! A representative from all the Campus Y comiaitim will be in the Pit from 9:15 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. for Y Horizon days. Come see what we can offer each other. The Musk Mania FUnt Festival presents The Last Waltz, the band's farewell concert, also featuring Bob Dylan, Van Mor rison, and Joan Baez at 8 and 10: IS p.m. on Friday and Satur day in the only Draft House Cinema in the area. Audio visual services at the Health Sciences Library will feature The Quiet Crisis, a film which discusses the trrreat of a severe water shortage due to the problems of pollution and heavy water consumption by agriculture, industry, and residences. I; will be shown at noon in the Conference Room on the second floor of the Health Sciences Library. The Saltans Cultural Crater presents rhythm and blues legend, Joha Lee Hooker & The Coasflo Coast Blues Band in concert at 8 and 10:30 p.m. at the St. Joseph's Performance Center, 804 Fayeticville Street in Durham. For more informa tion, call 493-2096 or 286-3604. The Performing Arts Committee of the Carolina Union in conjunction with the Association of Internationa Students is sponsoring "The Children's Folk Sports Presentation from Taiwan, Republic of China at 8 p.m. in Carmichad auditorium. There is no charge for the program. COMING EVENTS Al those interested in volunteering to work with juvenile delinquents at the C.A. Dillon School are asked to attend on orientation meeting at 6 p.m. Monday or Tuesday in the Carolina Union. Ask at the Union Desk for the room number. There will be an Optometry Recruitment Conference at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Carolina Onion. Representatives from the four North Carolina contract optometry schools and prac ticing optometrists will be available. For more information, come by the Pre-DentPre-Med Advising Office in 201 D Steele Building. The Carolina Union Gallery Committee will meet at 6 p.m. Sunday in Room 206. CHEC (Contraceptive Health Education Clinic), now ' meeting every Monday at 4 p.m. in the health education section of the Student Health Service, is geared to help UNC students be responsible partners in matters concerning sexuality. CHEC provides an informative slide presentation and an informal discussion on contraception. Individual consultations are available by appointment. CaO 966-2281, extension 275. The Office of Career Planing and Placement Services will offer practice interview sessions with a counselor from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 2-4 p.m. Monday. To make an appointment, come by 211 Hanes Hall (a resume is necessary to make the ap pointment). Sessions involve videotaping and a critique of the practice interview. A Pre-MedPre-Dent Interviewing skills workshop will be given 5-7 p.m. Monday at Nash Hall. Sign up for the workshop in 201 D Steele Building before 1 p.m. Monday. The Back Student Movement Constitutional Meeting is rescheduled for Saturday at 3:30 p.m. in the Upendo Lounge. Major changes win be discussed at the General Body meeting on Tuesday. Please come. Your input is needed. There will be a Sports Mart in the pit from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday. Visit with the sports clubs at UNC and find out what the SCC has to offer. The Theta Omkron Chapter of Kappa Alpha Pal Fraternity, Inc., invites all interested men to its Fall 1982 Formal Smoker, Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Ehringhaus Green Room. The SCA will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in room 28, Chapel of the Cross. We will have a garb making workshop. Bring your own material. AH are welcome. Interested la backpacking, canoeing, rock climbing, caving, or other outdoor activities? The Outing Club will meet at 7 pjn. Monday in the Carolina Union. New members are welcome. The Student Development A Counseling Center moonlights Mondays beginning Sept. 13. Come by Nash Hall to use the Career Information Library, pick up national test applications (GRE, GMAT, etc.) or call 962-2175 to make an appointment with a counselor. For more information, call 962-2175 or drop Triangle Communities in CHAPEL O Townhouse luxury in a beautiful, residential setting. Optimum loca tion for Chapel Hill, Durham and all the Research Triangle area. Featur ing two bedrooms, 1 baths and dishwasher. Air conditioned, of course. Enjoy swimming and handy laundry facilities. Cable television available. 252S Booker Creek Road." PHONE 967-2231 9 Modern one and two bedroom garden apartments offering carpet ing, air' conditioning and modern kitchen. Very convenient location, y C swimming pool and handy laundry facilities. Cable television available.: 306 North Estes. .- ' PHONE 967-2234 First-rate location on the 15-501 Bypass. Spacious one and two jrff bedroom luxury garden plans offer carpet, air conditioning and modern js kitchen. Swimming for your enjoyment, laundry facilities tor your con venience. Cable television available. 1 105 A rtinAal liill Pii irkam nru4 Hu 0nr-h 4 W lopoi r mii, wui i iii it waj uto nooaai v r 1 1 km ryr rainwD an - u m i ViT' easy access. Bright, modern one and two bedroom garden plans offer a pleasant hillside location. Air conditioning, clubhouse, swimming pool and laundry facilities. Cable television available. 500 Highway 54 By pass.". PHONE 967-2231 Great location. Real value. No kids. Modern one bedroom plans in a k. I . Ituah aIUoHi ih rnmrm inttv P.amAtinn CV"V ---7 ' 3' " a r j fif facilities on premises. Cable television available. 200 Barnes Street." PHONE 967-2231 "Rental office located at Kingswood Apartments. Chapel Hill location 3. CALL TODAY FOR FULL INFORMATION. PHONE 967-2234 or 967-2231. In North Carolina, call ton-free 1-800-672-1678. Nationwide, call toll-free 1-800-334-1656. U1MAT IF I T01P H0) THAT. YOU MAP TO CHOOSE BETWEEN HOW PIANO AMP ME ? V BE DOONESBURY I MUS7 SAY, D6ARS, THIS LITTLE chat has em MosreHum- BH1NG. IHADN01DATH56AY j (mwwmujAs facingsomany 1 nrvit ri as- I I M S .1 .A. Cs4f psrfcsfl" JmTtej! psTfcsfeCf f"wif j'feli jSaTSSS'l rf m . , From the Center for Human Ecology Lecturing on "Indians, Immigrants and Beef Monday, Sept. 13 1:30 pm Room 226 Perldns Library 10, 1982 by 101 Nash Hall. . The UNC-CH Men's Volleyball Club holds practices Mon days and Wednesdays 7-10 p.m. in Fetzer Gym. Interested per sons should attend or leave a message in the box in the Sports Club office. Shape-Note Singing will meet from 2-5 p.m. Sunday in Per son Hall. Traditional American shape-note hymns are sung in four-part harmony. All singers are welcome. The UNC Sailing Team will practice 3:30-5:30 p.m. Monday at University Lake. For more information call Ann Stokes at 968-4456. The Women's Lacrosse Club will hold its first practice at 4 p.m. Monday on the Ehringhaus field. Beginners are welcome. The 1982 North Carolina Frying Disc Championships will be held on NCSU's track fields Saturday and Sunday. Events in clude disc golf, distance, freestyle, MTA, K-9, double disc court, and ULTIMATE. Must register to enter. Call Kathy at 967-4900 for information. P.S.: The Disc Club goes to Wilm ington next weekend. -. . " The North Carolina Botanical Gardens will hold a Hope Mills habitat trip Saturday and an illustrated lecture on area mushrooms Monday. There wffl be a Jerome Kohl Reception in the North Gallery Student Center 3-5 p.m. at North Carolina State University , Sunday. The Chapel Hill Parks and ReorearJoa Department wiB sponsor a race walk clinic at 9 a.m. Saturday at the Phillips Junior High School track. The clinic is intended to introduce interested persons to the sport of race walking. " The UNC-CH Chapter of the Amerku Association of University Professor cordially invites members, new faculty spouses, and friends to a RECEPTION IN HONOR OF NEW FACULTY 6-7 p.m. Sunday in the Main Gallery of the Ackiand ARt Museum. Come join your Chapel Hill col leagues, chapter officers, and committee chairpersons for con versation and refreshments. Overeaten Anonymous, a self-help eating disorder group meets at 7 p.m. Mondays in the Conference Room at Chapel of the Cross. There are no dues, fees, or weighins. . The Raleigh Organic Gardening Club meets at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Cate Center, Merdith College, Raleigh. The pro gram will be "Cloches, Cold Frames, and Other Season Ex tenders." The speaker will be Bruce Wrenn, President of Raleigh Organic Gardening Club. The Triangle Area Lesbian Feminists (TALF) will hold their meeting on Saturday at 7 p.m. at the YWCA, comer of Vickers and Proctors streets, Durham. There win be a business meeting followed by a program on Alcoholism. Child care will be pro vided. The Student Consumer Action Union has a place for people with ideas and initative who wish to improve the quality of food, housing, and consumer awareness in Chapel Hill. Come by our office in Suite B Carolina Union (962-8313), and apply by Monday, Sept. 13, for Vtce-Oiairmanship and executive committee positions or to work on one of our program. Jim Ffaot, author of 77k Complete Book of Running, win speak in Memorial Han at 8:00 p.m. Monday. Tickets may be purchased at the Union Desk. The price is $1.50 for UNC students and privilege card holders, and 13.00 for the general public. Sponsored by the Union Forum Committee. . Run with Jim Fixx in the Carolina Union. Fun Run this Sun day at 3 p.m. beginning at Carrnichael Field. Get your Jim Fixx T-shirt in front of the Union from 1 1 a.m. until 3 p.m. for only M. ECKANKAR, UNC-CH, announces formation Of open discussion group at 7 p.m. on Sept. 12 in Hanes 107. Subject: "Pan-dimensionality as real experience." Book: Paul Twit- cheQ's Spiritual Notebook. The UNC tee Hockey Club's organizational meeting will be - held Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Union. Anyone welcome, regardless of ability or experience. The Academy Award-winning short film "Violet" will be shown on Thursday, Sept. 16, in the Union Auditorium. Doris Berts, UNC professor of English, and author of the short story which inspired the film, win speak and answer questions. Copies of the story are available at the Union information desk. ITEMS OF INTEREST Applications to work on the Complaint Line of the Student HELL Highway 54 Bypass. PHONE 967-2231 Tr-i mnln DnrL ara nil uiiH-tin air mnriitinninn anri rwtl t minriru Cable TV available. f THAT WOULPN'T BUT I'VE NEVER A5KEP H0) TO CU005E, DIFFICULT . HAVE 17 ASY0UCAHIMA5IN5.THS IS ALL mU GROUND FOR. MB.WmWHADANY GAYS AMONG OUR. FAMILY WLL, NOW, ACTUALLY, WATS NOT TRU5. PICKS UNCLE 0RVIUB CAMBOUTOF THE CLOSET LAST YEAR. HE$A FEDERAL JUDGE ANP FRJ5NPS. IN CHICAGO, Aa. -ft. L The Institute of Policy Sciences Consumer Action Union are now being accepted in Suite B of the Carolina Union. Training will be given in consumer, legal and business practices. The Playmaim Repertory Company is recruiting volunteer ushers for their upcoming production of an original musical "Life on the Mississippi", based on the Mark Twain novel. Ushers will be needed for each performance Sept. 23 through Oct. 3 at the Paul Green Theatre. Those interested should sign up at the PRC office, 303 Graham Memorial or call Shaun Baggot at 962-1122. GRF. (Graduate Record Examination) Oct. 16. Applications must be postmarked by Sept. 16. Fees are S27 for General (Ap titude) Test, and $27 for Subject (Advanced) Test. Late registration is $10 extra until Sept. 21. Applications are available in 101 Nash Hall. The Photographic Arts Society will hold its seventh annual . Juried Photographic Exhibit. The juror is Richard Cretcher, Director of Education, Ohio Institute of Photography. .The submission dates are Sept. 13-18 at the Camera & Photo Shoppe on 1107 West Main St. in Durham. Prints must be framed, behind glass or other protective covering, and be ready for hanging. There is a maximum of four entrees per person and an entrance fee of $10 per person. Has the drinking of a relative or friend affected your per sonal life? Want to meet and talk to others in your situation? . We will be forming an on-campus Al-Anon group. Call , 942-0067 for more information. The Association for Retarded Citizens needs people to be Citizen Advocates. In this program, volunteers work in a one- . to-one relationship with a handicapped individual as an ad vocate and a friend. Anyone interested in getting involved this way, please call the ARC office at 942-5 119. Sexuality Educational Counseling Service is now taking ap plications for counselor trainees and business personnel. Deadline is Friday. Applications are available at the SECS of fice in Suite B of the Carolina Union and at the Union Desk. Attention Graduate Students: Now is the time to apply for six-month Graduate Internships in the Nation's Capital. The Washington Center for Learning Alternatives, a nation-wide internship organization, has announced an October 22 applica tion deadline for its February-August, 1983 Graduate Session in businessgovernment relations. The Coalition for Battered. Women is seeking volunteers to provide services to victims of domestic violence. A thirty hour training course will be offered to interested men and women. The course starts Sept. 16 at 7 p.m. Please call the Durham YWCA at 688-43 or the Orange County Women's Center at 968-4646 for further information. DAT (Dental Admission Test), Oct. 9 Applications must be received by Sept. 13 with $25 fee in Chicago, 111. Applica tions available in 101 Nash Hall, 01 Brauer Hall, and 201-D Steele Building. This is the last test date for 1983 admissions! Make a Difference on Campus Get involved with Student Government Applications are still available in Suite C for cabinet positions. The Cancer Information Service at Duke needs volunteers who want to serve North Carolinians by answering their ques tions about cancer. An in-depth training program for volunteers begins in October. For more information, call the Cancer Information Service in Durham at 383-8524, or toll free at 1800-672-0943. The complaint line of the Student Consumer Action Union (SCAU) needs volunteers to help resolve complaints between students and merchants. Come by Suite B of the Carolina t'pion for more inrorm.itin. Historian presents 'Great Expectations9 A free, one-man dramatic reading of Charles Dickens' Great Expectations will be held Saturday, Sept. 11 at 8 p.m. in the Di Phi chambers (room 400) in New East Hall. Dr. George Curry, a historian of 19th century Britain, will present the Dickens text. Curry prepared the reading version of Great Expectations using Dickens' own words. . The program is sponsored by the department of English, the department of speech communication' and the School of Library Science. f co&M It uNWRsrry U'-' 5iJi2J2- I SHOPPING 11 fQ ctSfST10 I if a r I V ft GI.EN I ENNOX j. CARRMU. PJ1''1' ""SJ fefc i ' !'jr&k yrwufxgr of . BwyV A J CT NORTH CAROLINA H RALEIGH " ' i ti J? 5 til UNC MEMORIAL fi Rental furniture available from Metrolease. by Garry Trudeau THAT5 6FEAT! SF WHAT MADE MS BUTLER TRIED HIM DO IT7 f0 BLACKMAIL HIM, ! AND HE COULDN'T presents in Austin, Texas Experts: 1980 United Feature Syndicate, tnc 7-5 Men's soccer downs Atlantic Christian; Johnson breaks all-time scoring record By MICHAEL DeSISTI Staff Writer Senior forward Tony Johnson's, pair of goals led the men's soccer team to a 5-0 win over host Atlantic Christian Wednes day night, and in the process he establish ed himself as the Tar Heel's leading scorer of all time. Johnson, a second-team All-ACC pick last season, from Buies Creek, N.C., . scored his fifth goal of the year and 27th of his Carolina career 15 minutes into the second half of the contest, erasing Jim Reston's previous mark of 26 tallies. "It feels good, but I'm not overwhelm ed with winning individual awards," Johnson said. "I'm just happy we're win ning." Johnson opened the scoring 16:30 into the game when he headed a hard, driving corner kick by Mark Devey into the near post from just outside the goalmouth. That goal proved to be the game winner, as keepers Bruce Talbot and Larry Goldberg combined for the shutout. Right back Joe Maher finished out the half with the first goal of his career with just under five minutes left in the half. "I didn't know what to do," said the senior. "I don't know how to describe it because it never happened before." Maher carried the ball from his own midfield to the edge of the opponent's penalty area and, finding himself un marked, fired a low, hard shot into the far side of the net. Coach Anson Dorrance didn't hesitate to show his pleasure in his wingback's play. "Joe Maher was brilliant," Dorrance said. "He was making runs down the right side all day." K UNC continued to pressure the Bulldog's defense in the second half, as Devey scored the first of his team's next three goals 53:07 into the game. Devey picked up a loose ball 25 yards away from the goal, beat two defenders, then knock ed it in from 18 yards away, swinging it across the goal from the right side. Freshman Chris Connolly was next. The high school All-American midfielder ran onto a drop pass seven minutes later at the left edge of the box and bounced a low screamer off of the inner side of the far post. .jysiDTmjcrssjDESTC Now there's even more to the thrill of Class Cuts than the season's top sounds at low prices. Now there's the Class Cuts Giveaway. Register today and win these kindest cuts of all. The free kind. 1. Fresh cut flowers from University Florists. 2. Two cuts of ribeye steak from Cliff's Meat Market. 3. His and her brief cut underwear from Purrfect Lingerie. 4. A custom haircut from Salon 135. 5. A cut gemstone from Wentworth & Sloan Jewelers. 3 r V 1 . . UNC forward Tony Johnson wins tha bell in the air . . .men's soccer opens home season Sat. Then, with 34:18 left in the game, Johnson made his assault on the record , books. Taking a pass from Maher on his chest, he juggled the ball on his thighs before volleying it into the back of the net for the big one. The Tar Heels open their home season tomorrow at 2 p.m. on Fetzer Field, meeting UNC-Wilmington. The Seahawks have made a habit of playing UNC close, and Dorrance does not expect this year to be an exception. ' ' .- maim a. ..nil iy.iiiii.ii..iiii.. ii.,,, , RECORDS, TAPES & A LITTLE BIT MORE s ... . ilaWfr'-rtt V wnlaat i f ti 1 I. A v4 - ' . DTHFifca photo But regardless of Wilmington's play, Dorrance remains confident in the ability of his own squad, which has begun the season with a 3-0-1 mark. "I'm real pleased," he said. "I'm pleas ed with our attitude in training sessions, and our performance in matches has been excellent." NOTE: The women's soccer game for Saturday has been canceled. The Tar Heels' home opener against UNC Wilmington is in the process of being rescheduled. ofall. Duke University Campus 131 Franldin Street .... -. f