WHAT'S GOING ON MONDAY, October 22: 9 a.m.-12 noon Registration for New Students (semester classes meet) PA 113 10 a.m. Quality Forward Presents: Thomas Wolfe - One Man Show - Stuart Hutchinson Lipinsky Auditorium 3:30 p.m. Academic Policies Committee ZSS 231 4 p.m. UNC-A Foundation Board of Directors RL 1 4 p.m. UNC-A Soccer Team Vs. Pfeiffer College Misenheimer, NC 6-7 p.m. Registration for New Students PA 113 8 p.m. Coffeehouse Performance: Cy Timmons Coffeehouse TUESDAY, October 23: 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Term 2 Classes Begin - Late Registration PA 113 and Drop/Add 12 noon Circle K Cafeteria 12:30 p.m. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Coffeehouse 8 p.m. Dr. Sandra Thomas - Network for Women (Open to the Public) HLH WEDNESDAY, October 24: 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Late Registration and Drop/Add PA 113 12:30 p.m. French Club Meeting CH 232 2 p.m. UNC-A Soccer Team Vs. UNC-Greensboro Soccer Field 2-3:30 p.m. Workshop in Resume Writing - Dr. Ann Weber ZSS 235 2:10 p.m. Meeting of Students Interested in Pharmacy RS 123 7-9 p.m. Seminar - Biology of Aging PA 116 7-9 p.m. College Night Lipinsky Student Ctr. THURSDAY, October 25 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Late Registration and Drop/Add PA 113 1 p.m. Science Forum RS 122 3:30 p.m. ^ Alternatives Club RL 6 3:30 p.m. Forum Theatre Auditions Carol Belk Theatre FRIDAY, October 25: SATURDAY, October 26: 9 a.m. First Annual “Autumn Walk" Soccer Field 11 a.m.-5 p.m. SG Fall Carnival Lipinsky Student Ctr 2 p.m. UNC-A Soccer Team Vs. College of Charleston Soccer Field 9 p.m.-l a.m. BSA 50s Dance Cafeteria SUNDAY, October 28: 6:30 & 9 p.m. SG Halloween Special: “Don't Look Now” Lipinsky Auditorium AIDS The Financial Aid Office has two new publications for students and faculty which are available for your ex amination: "A Selected List of Major Fellowship Opportunities and Aids to Advanced Education for United States Citizens" and "The National Endow ment for the Humanities 1978-79 Pro gram Announcement," The National Endowment for the Humanities is an independent Federal grant-making agency created by Con gress in 1965 to support projects of research, education and public activi ty in the humanities. CIRCLE KOF UNC-A Students interested in starting a cam pus branch of the Asheville Kiwanis Club are invited to meet at 12 noon in the cafeteria each Tuesday. FASHION FAIR UNC-A's director of institutional research, Dr. Nathaniel Felder, is general chairman for the appearance in Asheville of the 22nd annual Ebony Fashion Fair on Oct. 30. The show will begin at 8 p.m. in the Thomas Wolfe Auditorium at the Asheville Civic Center. Proceeds will be used toward the operating budget of the Market Street branch of the Asheville YMCA. The Fashion Fair is touring 165 cities this year under the auspices of Ebony magazine. It features a large showing of American and European designs in women's and men's clothes and ac cessories. Tickets are $12 for adults and $6.50 for students. They may be bought at the Civic Center box office, Central YMCA and the UNC-A student center. CHEROKEE PLEA UNC-A special student Abby Bradley of Asheville, a Cherokee In dian, is among members of her tribe seeking to block construction of the Tellico Dam in Tennessee because the resulting lake will cover ancient Cherokee ceremonial grounds. She writes, "As Indians of the Cherokee tribe, we hold our religious beliefs as sacred as any possessed by the non-Indian society. "Our ancestors chose certain out door places where the life-giving spirits of the earth were strongest and easiest to reach. "We have had many of our sacred traditional grounds destroyed or fenc ed off, leaving us without access to those places that are sacred to us. American Indians have many needs, but without our spiritual heritage and freedom almost everything is lost." The concerned organization is the "Cherokee Defense Fund, Box 455, Cherokee, N.C., 28719. More infor mation may be obtained by calling 253-6061 in Asheville. WAR AND REASON Dr. Phillip Walker of the Depart ment of History and Classics will teach two additional history courses to be in cluded in the Term 2 schedule. Thurs day evenings from 6-8 p.m. Dr. Walker will explore World War II. Monday through Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. he will talk about The Age of Enlightenment. Two semester hours credit for the first course; three for the second. JERRY NEEDS HELP Want to travel with the Bulldogs? Cheer on the team at home and away? Keep statistics? Help tape ankles? Men's basketball coach jerry Green is looking for you. The job that needs fill ing is called "manager-trainer," said Green. It generally means "helping any way you can" to put the Bulldogs on the winning side. Whoever likes the sound of it can find out more by calling Green at 222 or seeing him in person at the gym. THE WINNAH! UNC-A student and guitar player Den nis Gosnell of Haw Creek won the musical competition at the recent Farm-City Week competition in the Asheville Mall. Public Information Director Bill Mebane won undisputed possession of last place in the Hog Calling Contest.