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Tuesday, July 2, 1374
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Summer Schedule 1974
for the CAROLINA UNION
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E!:v:n UNC students, under the direction
cf fcl'.tipl science graduate student Fred
Lr.hvzre ccr.ductbj a research project
cer.cjniir.j the irr.
cneixy cri:;s .on
acts End effects of the
the people of North
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problem
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As the first session of summer school
List week, so did. Chapel Hill's
men t.i ola sewer crisis, declaring the
situation an emergency June 21, the
Chspel Hill Board of Aldermen
bypisred the time-consuming bidding
process end purchased two $6,600 alum
treatment tanks.
When added to the town's sewage
treatment plant, the tanks will improve
the plant's capacity to meet the new,
more stringent guidelines set by the
State Department of Water and Air
Resources. -
Town Manager Chet Kendzior said .
he hoped the tanks would arrive before
the start cf the fall semester when the
sewer will again be operating at full
capacity.
The new treatment process will cost
.approximately $155,400. Chapel Hill
will pay 50 per cent of this cost, the
University 40 per cent and Carrboro 10
per cent.
Carolina and the resulting governmental
response to their needs.
The 12-week project, financed by the
National Science Foundation, and the
students includes graduate and
undergraduate students in varied areas of
study. They are interviewing legislators,
department heads and academic advisers of
various state agencies, to discover exactly
what has been done about this state's energy
problem, what agencies influence energy
policy, and how the public is affected.
A survey designed last summer by T.R.
Schwartz, formerly of the UNC Sociology
Department, will be used by the group as the
basis for their assertions
concerning how the public sale of gas has
been affected by energy policies.
The group has found much fragmentation
of functions within the state's varied energy
related agencies. For example, the Revenue
Department deals with gasoline tax, while
the Department of Agriculture operates the
allocation of oil and gas pumps.
The UNC research group hopes to
alleviate some of this fragmentation by
compiling a description of the various
agencies with their functions and programs,
and a list of all people in the state who are
involved with or influence enrgy programs.
Saying that North Carolina has "virtually
no internal resources of fuel," Light thinks
the legislature should devise definite energy
policies to prevent shortages.
The project, entitled "North Carolina's
Governmental Response to the Energy
Crises," grew out of a political science
seminar taught by Dr. Thad Beyle. Beyle
brought the NSF program to the attention of
his students and now serves as their adviser.
Mon.-Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Building
7:30A-11:00P
Closed
5:00P-11:00P
Bowling-Billiards Music Gallery
10:OOA-10:45P 1:00P-10:00P
Closed Closed
5:30P-10:45P 6:00P-10:00P
11
sun St
The Union will close at 6:00 P.M. Tuesday, August 6.
Pino Room
Monday-Friday
Breakfast
Lunch
Dinner
7:00-9:00
11:00-1:30
4:30-6:30
Saturday-Sunday
Breakfast 8:30-10:30
Lunch .
Dinner
11:00-1:00
4:30-6:30
UPENDO LOUNGE
Chsso CnCctcria Building
Monday-Thursday 3 p.m. -8 p.m.
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
o p.m.-Z a.m.
11 a.m.-2 a.m.
11 a.m. -8 p.m.
Wilson Library Regular Schedule
Monday-Friday
Saturday
Sunday
8:00 a.m. -11:00 p.m.
8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m. -10:00 p.m.
A
Undergraduate Library Regular Hours
;j: Monday-Friday
Saturday
:: Sunday
8 a.m. -12 midnight
8 a.m.-9 p.m.
10 a.m. -12 midnight
LOS ANGELES (U PI) Robert Maheu
won his defamation suit against Howard
Hughes Monday, setting the stage for a
second trial to determine how much
damages the billionaire should pay his
former chief aide for calling him a thief..
A four-woman, two-man federal district
court jury returned a verdict in favor of
Maheu, the former FBI agent who for three
years was head of Hughes Nevada
operations until he was fired in 1970.
!n a telephone news conference in 1972,
Hughes said Maheu was "a no good
Museum finds
Goya etchings
FARMINGTON. Conn. (UPI) A
collection of etchings depicting war-time
atrocities by famed 18th century Spanish
artist Francisco Goya has been uncovered at
the Hill-Stead Museum.
Curator Jerold Talbot said today the
etchings, printed from copper plates and
signed and numbered by the author, were
found in an unexpensive cardboard cover in
an unmarked shelf of the museum's library.
The collection, titled "The Atrocities of
War," was considered an indictment of
Spain around - 1810, when war and
corruption were rampant.
Talbot declined to put a price on the
collection, but an art appraiser for Southby's
Park-Benne Gallery in New York said a
.similar set was recently sold for about
$17,000.
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Bring This Coupon And Receive A
10 Discount
At
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Have A Great
lection Of Wine And
Deer Cold. Hot, Or By
Tito !Ceg, And Party
SuppJu
3SE3SX J ,l U
Also Visit Our Open Air
Market.
Fresh Produce
Vegetables
Potted Plants
Cider
JEWELRY
University Square
WATCH AND JEWELRY
REPAIR
123 W. Franklin St.
"Downtown Chapel Hiir
942-1331
dishonest son of a bitch and he stole me
blind."
M aheu was seek ing a total of $ 1 7.5 million
damages $5.5 million for loss of
expectable earnings, $1 million for mental
suffering and $11 million in punitive
damages. The same jury will hear new
evidence and arguments before ruling on the
amount.
Maheu, a stocky, balding grey-haired
man, took the verdict sitting at the counsel
table in the U.S. District Court without show
of emotion. But after the jury had been
excused for recess, he blinked back tearsand
turned and embraced his wife who was
sitting in the front spectator row.
Asked what he thought of the verdict,
Maheu said. "Well naturally I am very
happy." He was asked whether he felt it was a
vindication of his insistence that he had
acted honorably and legally while in his
Hughes employ.
"I certainly do feel it is a vindication." he
said. "As I said as long as 3V$ years ago. . ."
Maheu's lawyer, Morton Galane,
interrupted to caution Maheu that he should .
not comment on the case because the second
stage to establish damages is still pending
and Maheu ended his fragmentary
courtroom news conference. .
Jud?e Harry Pregerson told the jury to
report ior the start of the second stageof the
trial on Oct. 8.
The jury had been deliberating since noon
last Tuesday with a break over the weekend
when it brought in its unanimous
verdict this morning. The trial had lasted a
little over four months with millions of
words of evidence and testimony but Hughes
never took the witness stand or sent in a
deposition.
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This little piggy
stayed home
and used the
Tar Heel Classifieds.
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At $59.50, the new Advent2 loudspeaker
is meant to make it possible for people with
very limited budgets who usually wind up
with inferior-sounding stereo equipment
that only looks like the real thing, to buy
something really wonderful.
Ths majority of people who
shop for stereo equipment have
300 or less to spend. And most
cf them wind up with inferior
sounding equipment that looks
a lot more real than it sounds..
The Advent2 speaker system
w3 designed to change that sit
uation. Advent was sure they
could develop a low-cost speaker
that not only would sound
extremely close in every respect
to th2 best speakers at any price,
but would do so with low-priced
amplifiers and receivers. A bud- .
get stereo system could then
become something that most
people would be delighted with
for a lifetime.
The Advent2 succeeds in meet
ing that objective. It does so not
only because its design is the
result of twenty years of experi
ence in the design of high-performance
speakers, but because
that design includes basic
speaker components that are
much more expensive than
those of the usual low-cost
speaker. Advent was able to
make that added investment (in
drivers that are actually com
parable to those in speakers of
twice the price) out of con
fidence in the number of
Advent2's they could sell. We
don't expect that the inferior
stuff will disappear, but we do
expect to sell a lot of Advent2's
once people begin to hear and
talk about them.
The Advent 2 has wider range,
higher efficiency, greater power
handling ability, and a much
more distinctive appearance
than do other speakers in its
price class. It uses plastics not
for a fake woodgrain finish but
for a really graceful molded cab
inet which will look new and
beautiful (given a little soap and
water every so often) for years to
come.
If you're wondering who Advent
is to make these claims, we sug
gest you ask around among
friends who know stereo equip
ment. Advent is a leader in
stereo components, and while
they don't do a lot of advertising
and sell their equipment only
through the fairly small number
of dealers who they feel have the
knowledge and display facilities
to do them justice, their prod
ucts are best-sellers. Nothing
they make is less than excellent,
and their word-of-mouth repu
tation is second to nobody's.
Because of the Advent2 you
can now, for between $275 and
$350 (depending on which of the
several excellent record-players
and receivers you buy it with,)
buy a completely satisfying
stereo system. Not a "starter"
system or a compromise, but a
real and continuing delight to
own. '
D:i!y 10 cm toGpm
Fr ic!ry til 9 pm
113 N. Columbia Street
Chspe! Hill
042-3162
CScssd July 4th, Oth Ci 6th
HAPPY 4th
TOE E-3UB O-YD.'s
SUDDENLY DTPS
SUGUJRflER.
'A
i i r
Suddenly, you can save 25 or more
on summer fashions at The Hub . . . Shop Now
While the selection is great on these
famous name men's fashions: suits, sportcoats
slacks ...
Crabtreo Valley Mall
Raleigh, Shop 10-9:30
103 E. Franklin St.
Chapel Hill, Shop 9-6
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When college students open a checking
account St First-Citizens, they receive
200 free porscnalized chocks. You can
select from a wida variety of check
styles. And you have started with the
bank you can stay with. Service to
college students is net lip service et
First-Citizens. Vte are the bank which
developed the f rst banking program to
meet the rsal needs of resl people
graduating from collage, graduate and
professional school. It's $uper start to
L Lmi
bridge the financial gap between col
lege and career. It provides the where
withal to gst stsrtoi cro a billion
dollar bank serving North Carofina from
the mountains to the coast. Which
means we are big enough to meet your
financial needs today and tomorrow.
And our Can Do philosophy means that
you are important to us. regardless of
your financial nosds. So open your
checking account it First-Citizens, the
bank you can start with and stay with.
MwnbvFOI C. O 7 fl C.I.l Trut Company I I . I