Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 12, 1965, edition 1 / Page 3
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Sunday, December 12, 1965 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page 3 Campus Calender Events All Campus Calendar km jnust be submitted in person FOR RENT: CONVENIENT ly located, 2 bedroom house, unfurnished. 207 Short St. 3 blocks from campus. $95.00 per month. Call collect 695-4111, Southern Pines after 6 p.m. FOR SALE: 1964 CORVAIR MONZA Excellent condition, low mileage, 4 speed, good tires. Take best offer. Call J. Willinghan, 963-9117. FOR SALE: 1960 LAMBRET TA motor scooter. IL - 125 Good condition. Price- $125. Call 967-1022 after 4 p.m. FOR SALE: 1960 MGA 1600 Convertible. Excellent condi tion, never raced. 35,000 miles. R & H, wire wheels. Contact Fred Huebner, 968 9156 or 968-8325. RIDE WANTED: TION -Omaha, Call Pat Antrim, Manly Hall. DIREC Nebraska. 2nd floor, at the DTH offices in GM by 2 p.m. the day before the de sired publication date (by 10 a.m. Saturday for Sunday's DTH). Lost and Found notices will be run on Tuesday and Saturdays only. TODAY The final forum discussion on "Theological Questions Two Views" will be present ed Sunday at 7 p.m. at Uni versity Baptist Church by Russell Barbee of Durham. His specific topic will be "A Traditional view of the Vir gin Birth and Resurrection." At 8:00 p.m. the chancel choir will present a service of Christmas music. Graduate Christian Fellowship at 8:00 p.m. at the home of Dr. Fred Brooks, Granville Drive. A discussion on the New Life in God will be led by Alan Gravely, philosophy graduate student. Meet at 7:45 at GM for rides. Episcopal Student Congrega tion supper and program at 6:00 p.m. at the Chapel of the Cross. Advent Service at 7:30 at the Chapel of the Cross. Evening Prayer follow ed by M. Charpertier's Messe de Minuit sung by the choir. Everyone is wel comed. Mrs. Rebecca Berger, 942-1063 would like a ride to Norfolk leaving Friday, Dec. 17. She will share expenses. Theodore Bikel stars in a movie followed by singing and dancing at Hillel's open ing Sunday Supper Social SEARS CATALOG SALES OFFICE EASTGATE SHOPPING CENTER today. Please call between 3-5 p.m. to make reservations (942-4057) for dinner being served at 5:30 p.m. The Carolina Philosophical Society will meet Sunday, 3-5 p.m. in 213 Caldwell Hall. The topic will be "Love is a Perpetual Oscil lation between sadism and masochism," Jean Paul Sartre. The Student Peace Union will hold an important meeting Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Woodhouse Conference Room in GM. LSA supper and meeting in the church at 5:30 p.m. There will be a reading and discussion of Jean-Paul Sartre's play "The Respect ful Prostitute." Westminster Fellowship pre sents Christmas Worship at 5:30 p.m. All persons par ticipating in the Westmin ster Fellowship - Episcopal Student Congregation pro gram at Murdoch School should meet at the parking lot of the Episcopal Church at 1:30. Going to Europe next sum mer? Get organized! Come to Roland Parker Lounge (2nd floor GM) this Sunday at 4 p.m. MONDAY The WRC Rules Committee will meet Monday at 6:45 p.m. in the Woodhouse Room. Attention all Aquaholics. There will be an important meeting Monday at 7 p.m., 3rd floor of Wilson Gym. Be present as nominations for officers will be made. Jerry Elliot will speak at the Young Democratic Club seminar at 5:30, Dec. 14 in Chase Cafeteria. Get Mud 'n Snow Retreads with deep, cleat-like tread for dependable winter traction. Soars Uud 'n Snow Itolroads Guaranteed 15 months Any size Black & White Walls OUR LOW PRICE -$g35 Delicious Gift Solution: Hi rl fin OF OHIO Easlgato Shopping Center CHAPEL HILL HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. DAILY Close at 6:00 P.M- Saturday & Sunday Choral Club To Sing The Chapel Hill Choral Club, directed by Wayne Zarr of the UNC music department, will present its annual Christmas Concert Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Hill Hall. The 60-voice mixed choir will sing a varied program of seasonal music, including one example of nearly all the sa cred forms a motet, sev eral English carols and an thems, and cantatas. J Reapportionment Studied RALEIGH (AP) A tenta tive reapportionment plan be ing studied by North Carolina House members would give the Piedmont and bordering coun ties control of the House of Representatives. The plan, a knowledgeable source said yesterday, would reduce the representation from far western and eastern coun ties, cutting the House mem bership from a dozen north eastern counties from 12 to four. The plan was drafted by a l&-member committee and has been distributed to the 120 members of the House for study. House Speaker Pat Tay lor has indicated the plan will be made public tomorrow. Under the tentative plan, 33 counties in the Piedmont would gain 12 seats in the House. Cur rently, the counties have 50 representatives. If the tentative plan is adopt ed by a special session of the General Assembly, the counties in the Piedmont and alon? its border would have 62 House members or a majority. WINTER'S ON THE WAY as the scene at left indicates. Franklin Street is the location, and the pine cones are for sale as Christmas decorations. Sometimes, though, when the weather Is as nice as It's been recently (photo I at right), Santa Clans seems a long way off. DTH Photos By Ernest Robl. You NEED to KNOW TYPEWRITING! SHORTHAND! Enroll in Afternoon or Evening Classes beginning February 7. 1966 Call or write for information today Town Glasses Secretarial College 159V2 E. Franklin Street Chapel Hill. N. C. P. O. Box 615 Telephone 942-4797 CU Tutoring Programs Help Image Of Students L Students at the Consolidated University are working in many ways to kill the stereo typed image of the demonstrat ing - picketing agitator. Volunteer tutoring programs at all four branches of the Con solidated University are dem onstrating how helpful and community-oriented North Car olina's college students are. These tutoring centers work in a social and educational setting with elementary and high school children who don't achieve as highly as they . could, and try to get these chil dren interested in education. Right now 3 programs (Char lotte University tutors are just i Student S pecial Food the finest of its kind from Hickory Farms makes delightful gifts. Twelve pre-packed gift as sortments await your choice, covering the tasty spectrum from candy to exotic teas . . . hams, beef stick, spreads, fruitcakes, pancake mixes, and two or three of the assortments are samplers. From $2.95. Or if you prefer, select your own girt packages. So many single ta highly gifted. Remember, oart of our services. Come in, enjoy a cup of Hiarary rarms See ZTS.e fare, and make gift sections excellent taste. 0 Well, it isn't really tee offer our services to all of our customers. But this time of year, we find, students especially appre ciate our help. o G!FT WRAPPHIG - Il's Free! We,8ave you time and money and the inconvenience of buying all the materials necessary to do a proper job of wrapping the books your self. Our wrappings are handsome and dis tinctive, too! UAILIIiQ We prepare the books for mailing at no charge and send them on, if you like, for 35c per package. SELECTION -II'9 a bis one mcludins lots of titles you won't find anywhere else, lots of titles you won't find anywhere alse. book! Come visiting! The Intimate Bookshop beginning their service) have about 350 volunteer student tu tors helping over 700 children from 1st grad up through high school. Michael H. Lawler, coordi nator for Youth Educational Services, (YES) a newly form ed consulting service for college-based tutoring services throughout the state, explains why these tutoring services are purposely centered around col leges: "College students have a high sense of community prog ress. Where they used to be thought of as lazy and passive, they are now getting concern for the state and its people. The students are extremelv enthusiastic about these proj ects, and readily take on the responsibilities thp.t go with them. Also, the kids being help ed feel much closer to college age people." YES began last September, when it received grants total ling $30,000 from the Ford Foundation, the North Carolina Fund and the Learning Insti tute of North Carolina. Its headquarters at the Quail Roose Conference Center 12 miles north of Durham was also given to it by the Learn ing Institute. w r surance Estates Annuities Time It AH II Costs To Compare" William M. Buell The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company 121 W. Rosemary Si. P. O. Box 1314 Bus. 942-6966 Res. 968-66221 Christmas Cards One of the Finest Selection In North Carolina Come in Today, Browse Choose. Still time to place your order for personalized cards, but don't delay. GIFTS Hundreds . . . Something: to Please Everybody on your Hat. GIFT WRAP Ribbon, Paper, Tape, Stickers, Cards. Let us advise you in wrapping for mail ing:. And Don't Forget . PARTY SUPPLIES Everything for gala holiday festivities Beer on the (Oh, no!) The other day, for the first time, our brewmaster heard of "beer-on-the-roiks." He fell apart. He really doesn't have anything against ice cubes ... for scotch or old-fas'hioneds or lemonade. But not for beer. Especially the King of Beers. You see, he knows how much extra time and expense it takes to get that Budweiser taste and smoothness and drinkability. Add a couple of ice cubes and "bloop". . . there goes all that extra effprt. Ice cuts down the head and waters down the taste. And, with Budweiseir, that's a tragedy. Budweiser is the only beer in America that's Bechwood Aged. We allow Bud to brew its own tiny bubbles . . . slowly, naturally . . . over a dense lattice of beechwood strips. Triat's why Budweiser tastes better, foams better and sets better glass after glass. So if Vou know somebody who likes to plunk ice cubes in his Budweiser, please don't tell our brewmaster. (We hate to see a grown man cry.) itfs worth it... it's Bud AHHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . ST. LOUIS ERK . LOS A1GEUS TIP nd toon HOUSTON. TEXAS
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 12, 1965, edition 1
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