4The Daily Tar HeelThursday, November 17. 1983 Scientist calls Lucy key to human origin Each of these advertised items is reauired to be readi sale at or below the advertised price in each A&P Store (einn.iiy noieu in WIS 30. ly available for e. except as 1 PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, NOV. 19 AT A&P IN CHAPEL HILL & CARRBORO ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS tnn rurnv ma m vmi mruii iup um iumim v 5rwiltkni 1U.IJ IUU dTChd, HE HILL ItVU&lc MAXUFACTUSER'S CCJPCSS, EXAMPLE: $10 PURCHASE 5 CCUPCiSS, $29 PURCHASE 10 COUPCKS, $100 PURCHASE 50 CCUPCXS. ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE! Inni now and Now: It, w art radaam national wnutoclwf cana-oH coupon up to SO tor OouMa tha vafcia. Oftar good on national manu tacturara' canU-oW eoupona onfy. (Food rotaMar coupon not aosaptad.) Cuitomt must purcnaaa ooupon product at aoadnad tzm. Expirad eoupona ana m do nonorao. una ooupon par customor b Nam. No ooupona acoaptad for fraa inorchandw I ooupon par customor par 30jd for fraa marchandna. OWardoaa not anpryloA or otharatora eoupona arttathar atanufacturar la manttonad or not. Whan tha vanja of tna coupon aieaada SO or tha rataH of tha Ham, tMa offer la HmHod to tha rataM prlco. Savings an Grwtt witti MP's D0V8L SAflKSS CQUPCUS! MTC't MFC MPAOOCO TOTM. COUPON coupon -cmTmorr- -cgwrsorr at up COUPON A 25' 25' SO COUPON B 18 18' 36' COUPON C S0 50 $1.00 COUPON D I 75' I 25 S1.00 ' Limit 2 oi f no Smoked butt ib -t os Ham - portion " 1 C SAVE $1.21 LB Round Roast WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF Boneless SlOEl Bottom I yy Ib. U SAVE 41 LB. Sliced Bacon MARKET STYLE r m jMNHHaW Mb, SAVE7 EA.tl C m r . SAVE 6 LB. Ripe Bananas GOLDEN YELLOW SAVE $1.00 Russet Potatoes U.S. 1 4. T 'T Qoirinne V save 151 Savings 1SAVE 2(H " (MM13 Ik EV O&fl? Vim r I Taa lfc IT 3lWI SAVE A&P GOLD REGISTER TAPES FOR lMm ieel Eootosre (SEE STORE FOR DETAILS) a Q a a a a o a D D DaaaoannoBBaa P)) A&P COUPON) f Citi2SHS DiSC 5 Off Total Purchases On IVednesdays WITH THIS COUPOn AII0 1.D. MUST BE AGE 62 AF!D OVER j fP M M f '"" m zaw a uus JL ' "V SAVE 16 "- SAVE 60 if Hargarine Qtrs. Ice Cream BLUE BONNET FLAV-O-RICH 11 M Margarine ff M ,w, ,..,, .i.i.lh w,,,- ,gg,fTii.- M,mi.aiu...- Covered Sauce Pan S9.S9 V WTTH $200 WOflTM . V AaPGOLO y ft SGISTERTAPtiSX BODBDOQBBQ D n . Q Q 699 R Chapel Hill Rams Head Plaza Carrboro 750 Airport Road 15-501 By-Pass 607 W. Main Street D COUNTRY KITCHEN DELI SPECIALS Virginia Baked Ham Delicious , Russer Bologna Sandwich Cut Swiss Cheese Fresh Health Salad FreshT Made ; -;f ' -;v; .,v"7 Carrot & Raisin Salad Pumpkin or Sweet Potato Pie each 999 lb. cL 1 98 ib 398 ,b.8 2 I By MARYMELDA HALL Staff Writer "I think there are a number of common denominators all humans share where we come from, how we got here, who we are," Donald Johanson said in a presenta tion Tuesday night. About 500 people braved a steady downpour and slogged to Memorial Hall to hear Johanson, a renowned paleoanthropologist, author and "old bones pusher." Johanson's slide lecture was titled "Searching for Our Ancestors." "We are a special species," Johanson said. "We have a fascination for unraveling mysteries, and we're also able to piece together the puzzle. We just don't have a boxtop picture to the puzzle of our ancestors." The hypothetical picture of what happened millions of years ago is always changing, Johanson said. "Lucy is one of the pieces to the puzzle that there were no spots for, so we had to rearrange the puzzle." Lucy is the oldest, most complete skeleton of any erect walking human ancestor ever found. Johanson and Tom Gray, one of his students, discovered Lucy in 1974 in the . Afar region of Ethiopia. Lucy's gender was determined from the size of her pelvis and her small stature of about VA feet. She was in her early 20s and weighed about 50-55 pounds when she died. She got her nickname from the Beatles' song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds," Johanson said. Perhaps even more important than the discovery of Lucy was the discovery of the First Family in 1975, Johan son said. The First Family is the fossilized remains of at least 13 individuals, children and adults. This discovery marked the first recovery of an associated group of in dividuals. "We don't just take shovels and start digging to find these fossils," Johanson said. "We walk and survey the land, looking for fossils that are eroding out of deposits." One of the earliest hints of horninid remains in the Afar region was Johanson's discovery of a knee joint in 1973. "I had done extensive graduate work on teeth," he said, "so naturally I found a knee joint." Johanson also spoke about other important discoveries . I II.. .1,1 II III .11 III llll Llll . J- HL.II.I.U-..ll.,1,.m.J.LlJIIU,,lllLlI...Ml.IUII IUa.JU.OI I L . JU JWIW 1 1 LUUHJIIIIUIIIIiy WWfJLMU-l.IU.Mim IIJXMf IMIjU UlUM ABWiailWWIMMUWMIWPM .HU.U.H.P. w Mi- -" - -if 111 I 'll inn 1111 it mini -ni rnl -mi innii if (J. .J '"'Hi.. - n - i in- n .mi. n nr-inni.i.ii n -m DTHZano A. Saunders Donald Johanson spoke Tuesday in Memorial Hall about Lucy, the oldest, most complete skeleton of an erect-walking human ancestor ever found. in the field of paleoanthropology, including anthropolo gist Mary Leakey's 'discovery of footprints in Laetoli, Africa. "At least two human ancestors left their trail in the white volcanic ash of the region," Johanson said. "The foot is smaller lhan the human foot and has a large toe, but it was adapted to walking on the earth," he said. "When I was at a party in Berkeley, or Beserkly, some one asked me what my fantasy was. I told them I hoped one of these Laetoli horninids had tripped and fallen on his face," Johanson said. Johanson believes his species Australopithecus afarensis is the trunk of the evolution tree, the ancestor for two separate branches, one leading to Australopithecus robustus and the other to Homo sapiens, modern man. Johanson has published more than 50 scientific and popular articles that detail his work book It icy: The 'DTH' staff meeting set for Monday Healey Beginnings of Humankind, which tells the complete story of his fossil discoveries, received the American Book Award in the science book category in the Spring 1982. Johanson currently serves as the director of the Institute of Human Origins in Berkeley, Calif. He has said he in tends to develop the institute into the primary center for human research in the United States. "If we can accept the undeniable fact that all humans can be traced back to a common origin, then we can con template where we're going. If the destiny of this species is a common destiny, we will have a long and successful future," Johanson said. "It would be a tremendous tragedy if someone pushed the button, because then there would be no one a thousand years from now to piece together the puzzle." From page 1 There will be a mandatory meeting for . all DTH staffers Monday night at 9:30 in disaster the Union. Check the schedule for the room number. Be there. From page 1 He said that each dorm is equipped with fire alarm systems hooked up to the county emergency com munication system and that the campus fire alarm systems will be hooked up to a campus police monitor ing system within a year. "I feel that we are prepared to deal with any situation involving a gas leak, chemical spill or a fire," Sherman said. "What we're not prepared for are things like freak storms such as tornados. "That is one of my biggest concerns about the cam- Lebanon pus, because I'm not sure how we would get in touch with people to warn them. Then again, we're not in the tornado belt, so we might never have to worry about it," Sherman said. Flury also said there was no plan for an all-campus . emergency. "Every building has an exiting plan concerning anything like a tornado, but we would want to keep people in the buildings in that case." methods fail, they go to the world press and identify the torturer and the victim. If Amnesty doesn't know a person is being tortured in a particular country, then the country assumes it won't be caught, Healey said. By applying pressure to the human rights violators, he said, Amnesty is in effect cutting down on the torture. "Nobody wants to be known as a torturer, and if we identify them, half the time the torture ceases," he said. Often, Healey said, he was asked to compare the em phasis on human rights in the Carter administration with the Reagan adrrunistration. He said that Jimmy Carter was now a member of Amnesty and he said that his administration was responsible for making human rights a household word. "I don't like to compare one administration to the next," he said. "We try to work with whoever is in of fice to reach our goals." Amnesty, which has 288 local prisoner of conscience adoption groups, is a highly centralized and a highly disciplined movement, Healey said. People think Amnesty is a left-wing organization, but in the United States it is a centralist group, he said. It is an interna tional human rights organization critical of any country that is guilty of human rights violations. "In this coun try we are trying to abolish the death penalty, which we feel is a blatant violation of human rights," he said. From page 1 junk From page 1 Wednesday's air raid was the second since the Tyre bombing that killed 29 Israelis and 32 Lebanese prisoners. The first reprisal raid came within hours of the truck bomb explosion and was against bases of Syrian-supported Palestinian guerrillas in Lebanon. "It is our policy to hit wherever there are terrorists who initiate action against us," the Foreign Ministry of ficial said. Israel's defense minister, Moshe Arens, has accused Syria of supporting a "network of terrorists" including Shortly before the air raid was launched, an Israeli soldier was wounded by small arms fire near Tyre, the Israeli military command said. Israeli troops closed the main coastal, highway. Jinking Tyre with the rest 'of Lebanon. Beirut radio stations reported. The new U.S. Middle East envoy, Donald Rumsfeld, arrived from Cairo and met with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. Talks were expected to focus on Shamir's trip to Washington later this month and the efforts to achieve reconciliation between warring fac tions in Lebanon. pro-Iranian Shiite Moslems and Palestinian guerrillas. n n Z BENTLEY'S DELI 4 Bring Mom A x I Smoked Turkey For Thanksnivinn Natural Smoke Process No Added Salt Fully Cooked , No Artificial Chemicals 10-12 Ib. average No Preservatives $2.75lb. . Stop By For A Free Sample TUESDAY-FRIDAY 11-6 SATURDAY 10-6 LOCATED ON 15-501 at EASTGATE 929-5848 TAKE HOME SMOKED FISH & CHEESES R eating. Candy sticks to the teeth and causes cavities. Candy also can cause minor depression in some peo ple. The intake of sugar causes glucose levels to go up Anderson said, and insulin acts to remove the sugar. But sometimes the sugar level drops below normal, causing a mood shift in some people. Students eat about 600 pounds of french fries at the Pine Room cafeteria each week, said Tony Hardee, director of food services for the UNC campus. Another 900 pounds are munched each week at the Fast Break, a fast food restaurant in the Student Union. "No matter what you offer them," Hardee said, "they're always going to eat french fries." French fries, Anderson said, supply energy and perhaps some vitamins and minerals. "The negatives would be that french fries are done in fat, so some of the energy would come from fats." "And french fries tend to be heavily salted. Salt isn't so bad," he said, "unless it's consumed in excessive amounts. High sodium levels in the diet have been associated with hypertension." ' Anderson advised that students avoid eating' large amounts of french fries and dousing them with' ket chup, which also contains salt. No food seems to be safe, but Anderson might have a higher opinion of the health foods offered at Nature's Cove, a snack bar in the Student Union. There students can buy yogurt, nuts, dried fruits and carob (a chocolate substitute) products. Students buy about 18S to 190 pounds of natural founds at Nature's Cove each week. "We try to have a choice," Hardee said. "You can buy something nutritious or not. You don't have to eat french fries." VILLAGE OPTICIANS PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED LENSES DUPLICATED CONTACT LENSES fitted polished cleaned SUNGLASSES Ray Ban & Designer prescription non-prescription OVER 1400 FRAMES REPAIRS DONE ON PREMISES 1 day service y:x.i..:,-mmi I I S 0 -A 121 E. Franklin St. 942-3254 JOHN C. SOUTHERN OPTICIAN and the Duke University Music Department Duke University institute of the Arts, Union Njajor Attractions, University Office of Cultural Affairs proudly present the exciting Duke University Duke frnnnrrL run rn LiJ and special guests in concert with the DUKE jazz ensemble conducted by Paul Jeffrey ? FRIDAY. 'WOV. 118 Tickets are S8 for the General Public, $7 for Duke Undergraduates On sale at Page Box Office, 684-4059 and all schoolkids Record Stores, in Durham, 286-4344 Good Only At Deli Location