4The Daily Tar HeelFriday, September 30, 1983 Oct. 7 last day for dropping and passfail Festifall Street Fair offers new attractions By DICK ANDERSON Staff Writer Mark your calendars. For next Friday, the final day to drop a course or declare the passfail option. After October 7, any student wishing to drop a course will have to go before an appeals board of the General College. Between 600 and 700 drops will probably be recorded Friday, said Ben E. Perry, associate director of records and registration. "We'll have a run that Thursday and Friday, especially Fri day," Perry said. "Most (students) are getting rid of the overload. Students generally take three more hours than they want to." Through September 10, 10,589 students had participated in dropadd, Perry said. Those students completed 20,662 adds and 16,883 drops for a total of 37,545 transitions. For all of spring 1983, 12,604 students made 27,356 adds and 22,992 drops, totalling 50,348 transitions, Perry said. Ten part-time employees are kept busy with the flow of stu dent dropadd traffic in the basement of Hanes Hall. "We have a continuous flow of people all the time," he said. After the six-week deadline for dropping a course has passed. act a student must submit a form of appeal to Donald C. Jicha, associate dean of the General College. An appeals board of three General College advisers and a non-voting assistant dean will hear between thirty and forty re quests during a busy week, Jischa said. The board's composi tion changes each week, meaning that every General College ad viser will serve at least once each semester, he said. In considering a student's appeal, something beyond the "I'm failing bail me out" situation must be evident, Jicha said. In stances will often involve a student's illness or having to find work. "We want to give these students every consideration we can give them," he said. . , There's no fixed percentage of grants or denials of students' appeals, Jicha said. "All of them are considered one at a time. The system works quite well." Dropping a course is "a rather severe thing to do," Jicha said. A lot of students react quickly upon encountering difficul ty in a course and want out, he said, but through efther summer school or correspondence courses, "you pay for it in the end." "There are times when it's probably advisable to drop a course," but some students push the panic button too early, he said. From page 1 St Lid PI tS From page 1 Democrats voting for the extension were Sens. Edward Zorinsky of Nebraska and George Mitchell of Maine. Sens. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., Mark O. Hatfield, R-Ore., and William Roth, R-Del., joined 43 Democrats in opposing it. The six-month amendment was defeated 62-38, with Sen. Charles McC. Mathias, R-Mdv joining 37 Democrats in supporting the pro posed reduction of the time limit. Sen. Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Commit tee, led the fight for the shorter timetable, likening the longer authorization to "an 18-month Gulf of Tonkin resolution." The Tonkin resolution, passed by Congress in 1964, was used by successive administra tions to justify U.S. involvement in the war in Vietnam. FOISTER'S BRINGS BACK i THE 35mm CAMERA CLINIC. j Bring your camera in for a check-up. All day Friday, September 30, and Saturday October 1 I Our camera technician will be in the store to check your camera for correct J mechanical and electrical operation. If a camera is in need of repair, let's get it J In now so that it'll be baeK in good working order for the holidays. I 2 There is no charge for this service! i FOISTER'S CAMERA STORE j Downtown Chapel Hill j Open 9:00-5:30 Monday-Saturday "Quality Service at Competitive Prices since 1911" j Topp, from the Alcohol Law Enforcement agency. Enforcement will begin immediately, she said. - Several Chapel Hill bars will refuse to admit 18-year-olds tonight in order to protect themselves at midnight, HiD said. He did not name the establishments. The University will require that all students be carded and stamped before entering any dorrnitory-sponsored party, RHA President Mark Dalton told the group. Other regulations are under proposal which will protect University officials from future liability cases. Staff writer Cindy Walker contributed to this story. ii cik . cinoi -nihil idoi l-Jm - A J 1 1 1 U I iiioi ------ - - - i u Jd ! t ABA Mel Gibson in SlSm 11 cjM )f f'Sr "& Kintek Sierra I ? "A MAO. SICK FILM!" 10th Final M ii "Q&P PROGRAMMED AUTOMATION AUTOMATIC FILM TRANSPORT "With Canon 50mm f1.8 lens" . Speedlite 244T shown optional $174.95 i The Canon T50 is the simplest-to-use Canon 35mm single-lens reflex camera ever! All you do is focus and shoot for great quality pictures automatically. And the price is great too! O Programmed automation, nothing to set! Automatic film loading and built in power winder O Optional Canon Speedlite 244T automatically sets best of three different apertures depending on flash-to-subject distance O Uses more than 50 Canon FD - wide-angle, telephoto and zoom lenses ' O Includes Canon U.S.A., Inc. one-year limited warrantyregis tration card FOISTER'S CAMERA STORE Downtown Chapel Hill yes,maam..i walked All the day to school in the rain... MS i IV 11 IV I JTt RKXSL COUNTY MY HAIR HAS BEEN PRIPPIN6 ON MY PESK, ANP MY TEST PAPER 15 SORT OF WETANPTHE INK RAN A LITTLE 7 ANYWAY, i've put MY TEST PAPER BETWEEN TWO BLOTTERS... 1 A SO HERE YOU ARE, s 1 MA'AM.. A TEST I VSANPWICH BLOOM heapunc quoting pfmpetn rzaimn A5 emmim mm wwz "ume pumpuns ms A RESULT OF cwumR piracy. T If "wmm ariHeRE GAiNEPflcceeeioouR stow filz m MAPeiHe cH(WGe$"SAip pemetzr cmepnoR jiu, smth. mmmebTH!b morning 200,000 FEMINISTS PFLftP The mm House wrm ovcr a miUON PUMPUN&S, PROfWWb -me mmimoH of m 101 t AIR&0RN6. TOtil&HT, 1H6 NffnoN'5 CAPmu RBtmis IN 1UTPL CHA05. 1 ii TH6W0NKR OFlTrMl O o -me ppBsmr's urne pvmpun EfWJZR . V fry CcTCmTW i 4 1 ft & t UPCOWIING SPECTACULAR Friday-Saturday October 21 -22, 1983 The Mission Valley Inn North Carolina's Largest Exposition of MICROCOMPUTERS SOFTWARE COMPUTER PUBLICATIONS ACCESSORIES Meet the ANDROBOTS and attend as many of the 50 seminars as you can fit into your schedule SHOW HOURS 9:00 am - 9:00 pm Call 782-0824 for information and save 40 on advance tickets. Sponsored by wm&mi and . m hm HMM Associates The 12th Annual Festifall Street Fair Sun day will offer new attractions and events this year, including musk, crafts, demonstrations and food. New events include the WCHL-Fowler's Chili Cook-Off. The cook-off will benefit the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chapter of the United Way and will be held on Henderson Street. Police will close off East Franklin Street between Columbia Street and Graham Memorial Hall at 11: IS a.m. Sunday. Town officials are encouraging fairgoers to park in municipal lots and not to block driveways or emergency entrances. About 150 booths will be set up, and 40 non-profit community organizations will be giving our information, selling balloons and T-shirts. Official Festifall T-shirts will be on sale in front of the Carolina Coffee Shop. The fair begins at 1 p.m. and will officially end at 5:30 p.m. TRACY ADAMS STAGE ENTERTAINMENT (On Franklin Street, next to Happy Store) 1:00 Apple Chill Cloggers 2:00 Carol Mastroberti, Folk Singer and Guitarist 2:20 Hargrave Modern Dance Group 2:40 The Resistors 3:30 The Pratie Heads , 4:00 Nightwind ENTERTAINMENT (Intersection of Franklin and Henderson Street) 1:00 Danceaerobics Demonstration 1:30 Sharpe's Workout Innovations Demonstration - 2:00 Steve Fogleman Street Magician "A MAGICOMEDY KINDA THING" 2:30 Chapel Hill Ballet Company 3:00 Chapel Hill Village Band 3:40 Steve Fogleman Street Magician 4:10 Jazzercise Demonstration 4:40 Gail Johnson, Pop Singer and Guitarist . 5:10 Steve Fogleman Street Magician KEN KAYE, Performing Juggler Middle of Street by Wachovia Bank TOWN OF CHAPEL HILL 1914 T-MODEL FIRE TRUCK Middle of Street by Hector's FACE PAINTING Sidewalk by N.C.N.B. Plaza, Sidewalk by Burger King, Sidewalk by Presbyterian Church INFORMATION, FIRST AID AND LOST AND FOUND Front of the Court Building 11:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Campus Cat.endah TODAY'S ACTIVITIES Women's Basketbal Club meeting will be held at 3 p.m. in the Union. All interested are welcome. For more information call Barbara at 933-6507, or Joanne at 968-81 1 1. IV CF Granville Chapter meeting will be held at 7 p.m. in Granville South Lower Lobby. Cleve McClary will speak on "Jesus ... A Way of Life." Everyone is welcome. Northeast IV CF welcomes you to come bowling with us from 8 to 10 p.m. in the Union downstairs. We will meet at 7:45. Have fun and fellowship. Come speak French at the Petit Quebec, at 4:30 at Molly Maguire's. Phi Beta Sigma will have an after jam at 2 p.m. in Upendo Lounge: Come out and party. The African Students Organizations will hold a reception and organizational business meeting today at 6:30 p.m. in Room 211-212 of the Union. Today at noon is the deadline to sign up your team for College Bowi, The Varsity Sport nf the Mind. Forms are still available at the Union Desk. COMING EVENTS Kappa Alpha Theta invites you to an All-You-Can-Eat Pan cake Brunch on Sunday, from 9:30 to 2 p.m. at "227 E. Rosemary. Proceeds for Derby Week go to N.C. Leukemia Society. Tickets are $3. United Christian Fellowship is sponsoring a 10-mile walk-a-thon Saturday to raise money for a missionary fund to help the needy. Contact Robbie Harrell at 933-3693 or Izy Lewis at 933-4084 to make pledges. Learn to skydive. Tonight's Parachute Club meeting has been canceled; instead meet in the Morehead Planetarium parking lot at 8: IS Saturday for transportation to the drop zone. Jewish Study Group will meet with Dr. Schlesinger this Saturday at 11 a.m. to discuss Jewish Ethics, history, and stories. Held at Hillel House on Cameron Ave. near Carolina Inn. Interested students and faculty are welcome. Maranatha Christian Fellowship invites you to come fellow ship with us as we fellowship with Jesus. We meet in 104 Howell at 7 p.m. every Saturday night. The Black Greek Council is sponsoring a Convocation for Greek Awareness, on Saturday from 8 to 9:30 p.m. at Great Hall in the Union. An All-Greek Dance will follow. Donations are $1. The public is welcome. The Omega Iota Chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., will have their 1983 Fall Rush on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in the Green Room of Ehringhaus Dorm. Please attend to leam more about Zeta. The Sexuality Education & Counseling Service will hold its first training meeting on October 2 at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. All volunteers are asked to attend. The Policy Analysis Group will present School of Education Professor David D. Dill speaking on "National Educational Achievement Indicators: Can the United States Measure the Effectiveness of its Schools?" on Monday in 207 Hamilton Hall from 12 to 2 p.m. The Anglican Student Fellowship invites everyone to attend its weekly Saturday morning breakfast from 9 to 1 1 a.m. at The Chapel of The Cross (beside Morehead Planetarium). Pat Metheney, Al Jarreau, Maynard Ferguson, Freddie Hubbard and many more great jazz artists will be in North Carolina this October want to find out more? Need a ride? The UNC Audience for Jazz will meet on Monday at 7 p.m. in the Union. Hear Professor William W. Kaufman of MITs Department of Political Science and adviser to trve Defense Secretaries discuss "What's Wrong with the Defense Budget," on Monday at 4 p.m. in S69 Hamilton Hall. Sponsored by Department of Peace, War and Defense. ITEMS OF INTEREST A group for bulimics, people who overeat, then vomit or use laxatives, is beginning in early October. For more info and sign-up. call Student Mental Health 966-2281, Ext. 254. UNC vs NC STATE Tickets are on sale at the UNC ticket office for $12. Each student may purchase one ticket for the game. NTE (National Teacher's Exam) Oct. 29 CORE Exam only. Late registration accepted for S12 extra if received by Monday, Oct. 3. Applications available in Nash Hall. Boxing dub: The newly formed UNC Boxing Club is look ing for boxers. If you have boxed before or would like to start, contact Brett Brinkley (933-6013) or Durk Tyndall (967-2499) for mnre informs''"'" Interested in Germany? Interdisciplinary seminar: "From the Turbulent Sixties to the Tranquil Seventies." Dey Hall on November 1 1-13. Politics, economics, literature, the arts, lec tures and discussions in English. Applications: Dey 438. Fee: $7.50. Registration deadline: Oct. 3, for more info call 966-1641. Pbymakera Repertory Company needs ushers for its pro duction of "As You Like It," running Oct. 5-9 and 11-16. ' Come by Graham Memorial and sign up outside the PRC of fice. See the show for free. Referees and officials are wanted by the IM. Extra SSS, new friends (enemies?) and you can set your own hours. Ail fall sports are still available. Applications can be found in the IM REC Office, 203 Woollen Gym. Especially for pre-dental, pre-medical, pre-health students interviewing skills workshops in preparation for admissions interviews. The first workshop is Thursday, and prior registra tion is necessary. Further information and sign-up schedule is at Steele 201 D. Sponsored by the Pre-Dental, Pre-Medicine, Pre-Health, Career Advising Office. Li DISCOUNT TICKETS AVAILABLE J AT THE STUDENT UNION HELD OVER AGAIN!! Something happens when she hears the music... gshdance A PARAMOUNT PICTURE 7:15 9:15 EAST FRANKLIN STREET 942-3061 LATE SHOWS FRI. & SAT. QUADRO PHENIA 11:30 CADDYSHACK 11:45 CAROLINA CLASSIC Elizabeth Taylor Paul Newman Burl Ives in CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF 2 5:05 i5c MICHAEL OAIMF RICHARD GERE The firs! time he saw her; she was a prostitute. The second time, , she was his best friend's wf a The third time, she was his. L-aX - ' - - , s s - ' - f 1 . -4 -.ST ...'.-. -'v PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A WORLD FILM SERVICES. LTD. PRODUCTION MICHAEL CA1NE RICHARD GERE BEYOND THE LIMIT BOB HOSKINS AND ELPIDIA CARRILLO BASED ON THE NOVEL "THE HONORARY CONSUL' BY GRAHAM GREENE SCREENPLAY BY CHRISTOPHER HAMPTON PRODUCED BY NORMA HEYMAN DIRECTED BY JOHN MACKENZIE A PARAMOUNT PICTURED R RESTRICTED S UkDEI 17EQUM(S ACCOMPANYING PARENT OR ADULT GUARDIAN STARTS TODAY! EAST FRANKLIN STREET 942-3061 3:00 o 5:00 7:00 o 9:00