$2.1 million Contrajts have been awaJrded for $2.1 million Oliver R. Rowe Fine Arts Building at the University of NorthCarolina at Charlotte, and constructidn* is' expected to begin immediately. / • ".v Bids taken, in September came in over ry Budget uommission apptuvcu r of $100,000 to the account from the pt, which is being built for y available for it. lire fooli, fine.arts contain the console for the 183-bell carillon to be placed in the bell tower. The structure will be placed on the north, side; of a small campus lake in tei^t-of the Kennedy Science Building, » j Dr, Mathis and UNC-C Chancillor D.^ Colvard said that they expect Jtla,;Jt«^ Building to be a vital iink'^between the Universi^and-thetfSmmunity. Theoiiilding is named for Charlotte^ businessman'and arts patro^ Mr. Rowe waa-a-^fa'uktee Monte Carlo Affair tonight to boost UA The Carolina . “Monte Carlo Night” will be held tonight 111 the cafeteria for the purpose of raising money for United Appeal. Faculty chairman [or the UNC-C United Appeal drive is Dr. olierman Burson. Student Chairman is LaVera rarnsworth. . “Monte Carlo Night” will feature a Pm-tlirowing booth. For a nominal fee students and faculty members will be allowed ro throw pies at Allan 1 lickok and Dr. Burson. Another of tonight’s activities will be a mgs contest.” Anv interested man may JOVRNAL — Student Publication Of The University Of North Carolina At Charlotte — .. Liontest.” Any interested man may liter. Contestants are asked to come m v^oniestants are asKea lo eumi. **■ n ,[dfs. Students may cast votes for the legs m their choice: One dine For One Vote. , A “witch contest” is also planned. Ihe ^[«thers of Alplia Phi Omega and Pi Kappa sponsor female representatives who will be dressed to look like witches. Students cast one vote for one dime for their tiivorite witch. Joanne Summer, Fran Craig, Debbie Larry Gilbert will staff a kissing ?Li for Monte Carlo Night. 'm game room will also be open. Proceeds Ro to tlie United Appeal. for Monte Carlo Night also include a [affle Raffle tickets may be purchased for twenty-five cents ner ticket. The prize. F. Lee Bailey: Sam Sheppard, ‘Boston Strangler’, Green Berets ono cents per ticket. The prize, a ■year subscription to PLAYBOY. '^'shing well, and a black jack and dice ’^able where students will play for cookies. OtLlUUIll/t) Wilt Y Appeal Agencies iiiclude the •^1;C.A. Bov Scouts Girl Scouts, and '^‘^dieal centers for underprivileged citizens. The University Union is bringing well known trial attorney F. Lee Bailey to Charlotte on November 12. Bailey will speak at 8 p.m. at Wagoner Hdl at Holiday Inn number 4 at 3815 North Tryon St. The attorney has gained national fame for success in defending a series of apparently hopeless cases. He is the man who obtmned a new trial for Dr. Sam Sheppard and successfully defended Shefpard in the second trail. His most recent attention came when he was named an attorney in the Green Beret Case in Vietnam. Other noted cases include those of the “Boston Strangler” and Dr. Carl Coppolmo. Bailey dropped out of Harvard College after two years and entered the Marine Corps as a jet fighter pilot. While in the service, he became legal officer for 2,000 Marines at Cherry Point and tried more than 200 cases. Following his release from the Marine Corps, he entered Boston University Law School, where he was top man in his class of 1960, but was graduated without honors because he refused to join the Law Review. Bailey will talk on the subject of the news media and fair trials. He has attacked the “muzzling” of the press at trials. Tickets for his speech will be on sale at the Charlottetown Mall Nov. 3-8 at $3.50 each. centers for underprivilegea Six nominated for Woodrow Wikon grants John S. Reed, Neil Carriker, Ron^d l^ord, Suzanne C. Haefele, :On Teat, and Thomas D. hoggin s nominees for Woodrow ^ 'wships. wships. R. W. llieke, campus f Fellowship program, released f names Wednesday, October -z. established to attract outstimding men vomen to the academic irow Wilson National Fellowship Nation will identify during 19o9-iJ' ising first-year graduate mnong f seniors in the United States ana Approximately 1,000 students out of almost 12,000 who apply receive consideration for awards of fellowships from governmental agencies, privately organized fellowship programs, and universities. These Woodrow Wilson Designates are men and women of outstanding intellectual promise who have shown, through previous study, that they have strong possibilities for the future. . Each university nominates its own students. A faculty member must nominate the student; a student may not nominate himself. Dr. Rieke commented; “It’s a very great honor just to be designated a nominee. After receiving letters of recommendation and basic information on each candidate, the Foundation screens out the more promising students in a semi-finalist fashion. After regional interviews and more comparisons, winners are announced. Honorable mentions are also released. Winners are classified Woodrow Wilson Designates, and honorable mentions receive the title Woodrow Wilson Honorees. At present, regional interviews are scheduled for January. Should any of UNC-C’s nominees pass into regional competition and later win a fellowship designation, UNC-C would recognize its first winner.