Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 7, 1970, edition 1 / Page 3
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I Wednesday, Jonuary 7, 1970 THE DAILY TAR HEEL FCC 2 t r.rcsf I mon Announces V if Si u 1-Niehters ks w ' w Ul v t i u E I i i A f j I 5 1 1 ! f 'V : its 4 v i i -4 EXAM TENSION The music room on the second floor will be transformed into an exam retreat, providing free, coffee and hot chocolate, music, magazines and people to talk to. (Fat city.) The exam retreat room will be simply a piace to relax away from the library or residence hall or wherever else you hide not an all night study hall. "Exam periods are really funny," one student said. "I think students take almost a sadistic pleasure in finding someone worse off than thev are." - "'m not even sure I'm going to pass my pass-fail course. Vvc let it slide all semester and now ..." "Yeah. Fvc got five exams in the first three days. I guess HI just have to get some dex and stay up straight through. " "This is my fifth year and I should graduate, but I need a 3.0 to bring up my QP. I don't see any way ..." Etc., etc., etc. Students and counselors will be on hand "to cheer up the depressed" or just to listen. You may even be able to find a late bridge game. This is the first semester the Union has tried this type of experiment. The initial idea was received with .immediate enthusiasm by students. "I think it's a great way to relieve tensions that build up during exams," one coed said. "If you get too uptight, there's someplace to go and someone to talk to." So, if your "equilibria" get to you go by. Campus Calendar INTERVIEWS for positions on the Orientation Commission will be held today, Friday, , Monday and Tuesday afternoons in the Orientation Office, Suite D of the Union. Applications and appointment sheet are available at the Union information desk. For further information call 933-2165 or 933-4948. FUNDS and Sponsor Cards for the Walk Against Hunger and due immediately in 102 Y Building. DR. JOHN LAMBE will speak on "Charge Quantization .vS t udies- Using Electron... Tunneling" today at 4 p.m. in room 215 Phillips Hall as part of the Duke-UNC Physics Colloquium. Tea and coffee will be served in the lounge at CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 -Moccasin 4-Mountains of Europe . 8 Ballot 12- Anglo-Saxon money 13- Swing 14- Ox of Celebes 15- Hole 16- Suite of rooms 18-Satiates 20- Enclosure for chickens 21- Note of scale 22 Corded cloth 23-Country of Asia 27 Cravat 29- Genus of cattle 30- Talk idly '31 -Hypothetical force 32 Israeli 33-Pedal digit 34 Prefix: formerly 35-Sat for portrait 37- Cccupied a chair 38- Superlative ending 39 Narrow, flat board 40-Old timer (colloq.) 1-Part of "to be" 42-Decorate 44-Article of furniture 47-Slivers . 51 -Goddess of healing 52 Great Lake 53- Appel!ationcf Athena 54- Unit of Portuguese currency 55- Golf mounds . 56-Condescending look 57-Nahoor sheep DOWN 1 - Explosive noises 2- Solo 3- Bovine animals, collectively 4- Word of sorrow 5- Brim 6- Sets 7- Sharpen 8- Kind of bat 9- Unit 10- Measure of weight 11- Dine 17-Preposition 19-Babylonian deity 22-Tier 24- Sun god 25- The sweetsop 26- 0ne following 27 - Covers 28- Sacred image 29- Article of , furniture 30- Vessel 32- Wharves 33- Make lace 36 37- 38- 40- 41 - 43 - Onisnii fcPTiN V il'hen h'oj are f elecup the " Ve never kftcxoN Anyone before HAVE BEEN HEAD BEAGLE FOR A SPECIAL JH0 &3A5 SELECTED THE HEAP 1 SELECTED 5f THE ASSIGNMENT ,MDU SAY A FEU) J5EA6LE FOR A 5PECIAL ALIGNMENT I HEAP &EA6LE FOR j WCK 6Q00WS, fiW Rl&H Off I "N. U ' "D ! 1 , oirT1UVHi fl I WIVES WHO MEN FIT P BINGO S Vthe TA1F ; "-r Sustw to should ioJgiizwl ?j!xJdLjZ Gffijyr jwt-tryusin the same ; TF l JV- -l-r 4fS CLSE TWICE !N)Nl Jf i - r -L- d Examination a word derived- from French and Latin has as one of its earliest forms "equilibrium," according to Webster. (It seems almost ironical since exams tend to destroy "equilibrium.") It would be asinine to say don't get psyched up about that mental ordeal coming up in less than two weeks. Everyone does. Cramming, lack of sleep and seemingly unbearable tension plague everyone. If you need some place to go (after the last bar closes?). Carolina Union will be open 24 hours each day of the exam period (except for Saturday, night, Jan. 24) to give student a place to unwind. 3:30 p.m. WALK COMMITTEE will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Wesley Foundation to plan follow up action to the Hunger Walk. All walkers, sponsors, etc. are urged to attend. U.N.-NEW YORK Seminar (semester break) applications are still available in 102 Y Building. TALKING POINT, a program which lets students with problems talk openly with professionally counselors, is held each Monday through Thursday. at. 7-1 1p.m. in room 105,of the YMCA. m - BABYSITTING LISTS compiled by CWC, are available at the desk of Carolina Union at the Dean of Women's office. Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle SlMiSAjR KMl Pj. P ZTU M G gL.jg.IB SENT 9. JL L W. L OT M. e i egpATJptiiM spa RpM t r e pTTsr. els t e rTjp sip wels s pTa s t omsl X 1A S ANOST u NiSPSjf g W ft i ops IMA i. TOte g faimTpffie e rot ft s a MWiTEjlp a i s ITS Tu clsklst jsipiAlTiet A continent (abbr.) Mother of Dionysus Burning coals Essential Cooled lava Registered nurse (abbr.) 44- Former Russian ruler 45- Hold on property 46- Silkworm 47- P!ace 48- Prefix: before 49- Falsehood 50- Female ruff I 2 3 s4 5 6 7 S8 9 10 11 12 fell gu TT WW S&P 3334 xN vvv Xv 35 36 3g37 38 39 42 43 4 45 44 47 48 49 50 "Ml mr I I I tm" I I Distr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. 7 i f It Can't Even Snow In Chapel Incident Amuses During Summer By JOHN DAVIDSON Ewing Philben was last seen headed in the direction of Crete, and Skip has never heard from him again. Skip . Lance, a senior zoology student from Spruce WAR, POT But No BVDy PIG College Press Service California license plates have three letters preceeding the numbers, producing some embarassing combinations. Gov. Ronald Reagan has gone out of his way to rectify this situation, developing a full-scale program to exclude offensive letter grpupsings on this year's plates. University of California's linguistic researchers department spent hours ravaging seven languages for short naughty opprobriums. The list of 3-letter combinations was released to the press with some hesitation. Banned forever from the sun-painted highways is PIG, SEX, BRA, BVD, and a few others. RAT, SAP, SOT, ALE and RUM are also deemed too suggestive. And FAG and DAM also go. On the political side, KKK is forever banned, but as a concession to liberality, GOD goes, too. GYP, HAG, DDT, CAD, BAD and BAG are eliminated along with FAT. Although you can't get PIG. or SEX or RUM, you can still have HOG, WAR, LSD, POT or MAO. The researchers found one "real bad" combination in French that is still going to be used, but they wouldn't say it! Planetarim The Morehead Planetarium announces the closing of its traditional Christmas program "Star of Bethlehem" and the opening of its new Public Program "Stonehenge." "Star of Bethlehem", the scientific and spiritual account of the Christmas star will run through Jan 12th. The program Pine, and Suzy Ruppalt, a chemistry major from Charlotte, were hitch-hiking across Europe. The couple's ultimate goal was to reach the Matala Caves in Crete, where there is a colony of expatriate in Brindisi, Italy, Skip spotted another American in a bar. After spilling the stranger's beer while reaching over to shake hands, the affable Carolinian quickly befriended him and got a ride to Athens, Greece. The other American was named Mike Judge, and he was driving a Renault Dauphine that belonged to a friend who had flown to Istanbul, and who was to pick up his car in Athens. The friend's name was Ewing Philben. Skip and Suzy left Mike in Athens and took a ferry to Crete where, after several days of hitch hiking, they were able to reach their destination, the Matala Caves. "The Caves were cleaner than any hotel in the area", explains Skip, "and they were .free." Skip and Suzy. .stayed a couple of days with some American friends sunning on the beach arid eating potato ; omelettes, the only food that was served in the local restaurant. After having returned from Crete to Athens, the couple found themselves on the road again as their money was running low. After standing a very short while by the side of the road, an awfully familiar" Renault Dauphine pul'rd up to r the curb to give them a lift. It was not Mike Judge who was driving this time, but Skip was fairly sure that it was Mike's much-talked-about friend. Ship got in the car and very casually asked, "Hello, Ewing. How was Istanbul?" The befuddled Ewing almost collapsed from shock. "I could have kept him going for hours," Skip says, "but Suzy blew it when she started laughing.1" After explaining the whole story to Ewing, Skip and Suzy once again found themselves safe, warm, and heading back to Brindisi in the same car that PI 4n ans stonenenge offers scientific explanations for the Christmas star which include the possibilities of comets, novae and super novae, and the conjunction of the planets Jupiter and Saturn in the years 7 and 6 B.C. The scientific explanations which are offered for the f IYVH Staff Htoto by i.liff kolvson Hill. . . Couple Travel they had left town in. In order to get to Brindisi, however, one is obliged to take an all-night ferry from Patros, Greece. Skip and Suzy walked onto the ferry leaving Ewing to drive the car on. After waiting awhile for the ferry to leave, Skip realized that Ewing was not yet aboard. He found his friend at the dock surrounded by irrate Greek customs officials who seemed to be giving him a very hard time. Apparently when a car enters Greece, the driver's passport must be stamped as proof of ownership. Mike Judge, not Ewing, had the stamped passport. Tct complicate matters further, no person whose passport has been stamped can leave the country without a car. This measure insures that no one can sell a car in Greece without paying the required import duties. Ewing was not about to : leave his car, nor was he about to leave Mike to be. arrested and rot in some Greek prison f when he tried in-turny to leave Jhe -.country. All , Ewing could, " do was" to findhb friend. -Where was Mike? When last seen he was headed in the : direction of Crete. Play 'Water' Held Over In Raleigh "You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running," the third show in the Raleigh Little Theatre's current season, completed its announced run with sold-out houses. The comedy will hold over this week only, today through Saturday. " . . . Water's Running" is a quartet of plays, all by Robert Anderson, and all concerned in one way or another with the ridiculous marital hang-ups of modern society. Curtain time is at 8 P.M. at the playhouse on Pogue Street. Christmas star do not exclude the possible spiritual origins and implications of the star. The prog::am is moving both in the incredibility of the scientific explanations proffered and in its spiritual tone. At. 8:30 p.m. on Jan. 13th, the Morehead Planetarium will open the new Public Program "Stonehenge" in which time is turned back 3500 years and England's lonely ruin is visited. Public Programs may be seen Mondays through Fridays at 8:30 p.m.; Saturdays at 11:00 a.m., 1, 3, 4 and 8:30 p.m.: and Sundays at 2, 3, 4 and 8:30 p.m. Reservations are not necessary. 3 k i tl.L, Mesnorhl Hall Saturd av Jsn. IT. The 10 p.m. she the las! ordinal j feature 7 n. r.a olavlns the music I) 2.1 g.ave all Liter local birth to DLxieiand and jazz forms. Preservation Hall s on Si. Peter Street in of New Orleans Quarter. Preservation the heart French Hall was probably built during the Spanish Regime since it served as a tavern and inn during the American occupation in 1jD3. The Hall now rings to nightly sessions featuring orijpr musicians plaving earl' ma! iazz Diavma! eairlv .New Orleans style jazz. These are n candy-striped types t he straw in hats or beards wno play a spirited, imitative music called Dixieland. These are the originals, men whose instruments have ldr been Reader Theatre ; UNC Reader's theatre g will present a progjm on : children's literature di sentitled, 4iDo Children S: ; Notice?" tonight at 7 : o'clock on the third floor $ : of the Student Unib n. g James :g Hoerz, $ Readers will be Dudley, Welda :Kandy Perrin and Clinton $: : Parker. The piogjram is S directed by Sarah Brenner i$ and Stephen Whitfield. j Mrs. Martha Nell Hardy is $ the faculty advisor. I IffliTSiOJI 3 The PrenatJon Band will be appe. CUiLitVUlsUIL.Zl Learn about Etna for "Your Own Thing" at your An Equal Opportuni Placement Office. Employer and a JOBS-participating company. it j sathcir.J w h i 'i a In Sir;;Vd for it v. h.:: ;tr they vo::a. tr.e muse ir.ev ra trt changed from the turn of. the c-nti;r . The band includes a company of fne. Featured are DeDe riercv. bund trumpeter, and hU wife. Bil'ue. punisi. a:xi bbes singer, who hae been playing together 30 years in New Orlrsns with tours of campuses and eiineerts across the country. When Louis Armstrong was King of the Zu!uz in Mardi Gras in 1948. DDe was chosen as New Orleans finest trumpet, to lead the band in front of the ill on m Thursday, Jan. 8, the Current Affairs Committee of the Carolina Union will host the showing of two films, KU KLUX K L A N : THE INVISIBLE EMPIRE and HUNGER IN AMERICA, from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the Great Hall of the Union. For the first time, cameras and microphones have gone inside the Klan to study the band of men that has caused so much havoc in the southern United States. The history and the outlook of the Klan, w hose followers are increasing in the wake of growing civil rights activity, are examined in this chilling yet superb documentary. CTT i) n ! . Irf) In n i ! m .Ill f 1 1I tan i I! Il(fill MCS) A birthday toy. A burst of flame. At Etna our engineering people help prevent a tragedy like this from happening. They point out tens of thousands of potential hazards each year. Everything from wax used on supermarket floors to faulty wiring in a factory. Helping people is something we do every day. That's what made us one of the leading companies in the world handling all kinds of insurance. It's the kind of place w here you can do good and make good, too. r7nfqTrii 1 Z j LI FE fk CASUALTY SCY-01 OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE fmmm fan rnnnn SPECIALIZING IN REGULAR MAINTAINENCE SERVICE REPAIRS ON ALL FOREIGN MAKES VOLICSVAGEfJ SPFCIALIST5 929 - 311 E. MAIN ST. , f! float. BiHie Pierce was aeromparnsi in 5 he 20"s i;h the great Fcs;e rr.ith oif CUrk;-ia!e and Memrhts, Members of the Kar.d. all of whom are over GO. fcae bfvn p!a ic in New Orleans and the surrounding parishes for our 40 years and are among the few h'ir.g talented p;-;r.en who originated the N Orleans style. Ticket for the performance are now on sale at the Cam 1 ma Union Information I)ek. Tickets for the main fWr and lower balcony are 52 for students. S3 for the genera' public. For the upper balcony, student tickets are -51 O OiiOW 'Hurigei The second film. HUNGER IN AMERICA, is given credit for being the documentary which brought the problem of hunger to national attention. It sparked both the Congressional hunger tours and the Congressional investigations of the last few years. The KLAN w ill be show n at 7, followed by a discussion of the film led by Profes-sor Robert Miller of the History Department. Professor Joel Schwartz of the Political Science Department will also lead a discussion following the 9 p.m. showing of HUNGER IN AMERICA. Free coffee will be provided. rVil Q ".V i 162
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 7, 1970, edition 1
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