Thursday, February 26. 1970 THE DAILY. TAR HEEL Pec? Three 3imon And Garfiinke Stud en a f; 0 If If -i M it I ops f ' s. jumim f1 JL ff d n WCAR List "- - ' WCAR week ending 1. Bridge Over Troubled Water 2. Evil Ways 3. Who'll Stop the Rain Travelin Band 4. The Rapper 5. Never Had a Dream Come True 6. House of the Rising Sun 7. Give Me Just A Little More Time 8. Gotta Hold on to . This Feeling 9. You Got Me Hummin' 10. All I Have to Do Is Dream 11. Psychedelic Shack 12. Night Owl 13. Instant Karma 14. Call Me 15. Thank YouEverybody '; is a Star 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. The Thrill is Gone Love Grows Rainy Night in Georgia Take a Look Around Kentucky Rain Pick Easy To Be Free Items LOST UNIVERSAL WATCH, silver with calendar on the metal band and an inscription on the back: "C.L.C., St. Albans, Rice Award, 1966." Large reward offered. Call Chris Carter at 929-3118. YELLOW-GOLD TASSEL I.D. bracelet with initials B.L.K. on the front and FLS on the back and date 10-3-69 has been lost. If found please call 96.6-5494., ; . TORTOISE SHELL GLASSES in a blue case have been lost. If found call Mary Hymanat 933-1751. SWEATER, white. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS l;High mountain -4-Word Of .sorrow 8-Moccasin 11 - Sign of zodiac 12- Game played on , horseback 1ST- Father 15-Least 17-Hawaiian wreath 19- 0ld Testament (abbr.) 20- Expire 21 - Temporary bed 22- Possess 23- Equat 25- Study 26- Girl's name 27- Pronoun 28 - Drone 29 Conjunction 30- Prefix: not 3 1 -Occurs 33-Behold! 35-Brick- carrying device 36 Skill 37- Conducted 38- Part of fireplace 40- Exist 41 - Doom 42- Marry 43- Number 44- Vessel 45- Near 46- Unit of energy 47- Father or " mother - 50-Conversation 52-Conduct 54- Ocean 55- FaIsehood 56- Dines 57- Number DOWN l-Man's - nickname 2-Confederate general 3 Fine particles 4-Part of church 5 Parcel of land 6- Man's nickname 7- Lawmaker 8- Greek letter 9- Three-toed sloth 10-Diadem 14-Sicilian volcano 16-Goddess of healing 18-Latin conjunction 21 - Contrast 22- Unusual 23- Greek letter 24 Lamprey 25- Vessel 26- Abstract being 28- Possessed 29- Emmet 31 - Torrid 32- Before 33- 34- 35- 37- 38- 39- 40- 41 - I -Tto7 . S. Ill I ,t tSC r v ft 1 1 I I .Si I pM j pMl rz I 1 I I GOT IN Ff20NT Or READ ANY GCcSV i BOP' L ItWASAN) tAOlHER TUS1 AS) yBOOKS UATElgg; SURVEY ! larch 4, 1970 Simon and Garfunkel Santana Credence Clearwater The Jaggerz Stevie Wonder Frijid Pink Chairmen of the Board Jr. Walker Cold Blood Campbell and Gentry Temptations Bad Habits John Ono Lennon Aretha Franklin Sly and the Family Stone B.B. King Edison Lighthouse Brook Benton Smith Elvis Presley Nit Rick Nelson Lost & Found Yarmouth, Nova Scotia label, made of a fisherman's knit pattern was lost in the Bowling Lanes. Anyone knowing anything about the whereabouts of the sweater, please call 933-5383 after 6 p.m. GOLF UMBRELLA, maroon and white, was lost from the entrance of the Undergraduate Library Monday, Feb. 16. If found call 933-2633. , . SUNGLASSES, prescription with gold frames Air Force type, are lost. If found call 933-2417. NOTEBOOK, blue, Answer to Yesterday s Puzzle ItIairIn ! 8UP 6 RS 2b Permit Poem Concealed Newest Strike (colloq.) Part of flower Corner Preposition 43- Conjunction 44- Cushions 46- Piece out 47- Stroke 48- Bom 49- Sunburn 51-Chinese mile 53-Babylonian diety TA Vf IT H El AjJTIAILJEL E gjU ETF PEARlJT I NL-, r. J E M J aJrIt" SD TOPS SNWEpT AP A Sil A P I OB ljS A T EDRE p aIrJN E pTlS TRI.PE 1 HOdM 1. p. Zl? L 2. 1. P S TjVOP A R TTISJE TIS t sIaTrOr A TTpLl S RL tRTOlpt T RtolT A T TLNi-1- -LQZAJ lM?ErSlsUpElEL T""r"T"4 5 6 7 s8 9 10 ! Ti Igsn 3" 14 50 51 3I"33 vV licit t,.cl,p By BEN SINGLETARY Remember that old stringless tennis racket you threw out a few days ago? Your favorite phonograph record that you accidently cracked and threw in the trash can? Yesterday's copy of The Daily Tar Heel that the janitor containing Econ. 132 and 32 notes, is lost. If found call 933-1645. BIGE TOP COAT was taken from the South Lounge of the Union Wednesday, Feb. 11. Owner would appreciate the return of the coat. Call 933-3154 or 933-1044. FOUND BROWN GLOVE, suede on top and smooth leather on the botton has been found. Glove may be claimed at the Union Information Desk. WALLET belonging to Erwin Starnes has been found. Please 'call 933-4649 to claim. PAIR OF LADY'S GLOVES, black, have been found in the lobby of Morrison Dorm. To identify and claim call 933-4138. Campus Calendar Announcements AUDITIONS for two one act plays, ON BAILE'S STRAND by William Butler Yeats and THE COLLECTION by Harold Pinter will be held today in the Great Hall of the Union at 4:30 and 7:30 p.m. INTERVIEWS for president of the Carolina Union will be held today from 4:30-5:30 in room 205 of the Union. ECONOMICS 31 makeup examination (Dr. Benavie) will be held today from 7-10 p.m. in 103 Hanes Hall. FEMALE LITERATION 27 will meet tonight at 8 in room NOW READY Civil War Catalogue Drop us a card and we'll send it to you. The Old Book Corner 137 East Rosemary Street Chapel Hill -..: - 1 THAT'S VRy WCSJ j s j a . - To pens picked up off your floor this morning? Ever wonder what fate awaits the various odds and ends that find their way to your wraste basket? The final resting place for University garbage is a huge barren field, approximately three miles north of Chapel Hill on the airport road, according to Alton Smith, one of some 37 non-academic employees responsible for the collection and disposal of UNC trash. "We have three trucks that pick up trash from the big, grey bins you see scattered around the campus," Smith explained. "Dormitory janitors empty garbage from their buildings in these bins, our trucks come by and pick it up, and we carry it to the dump outside of town and bury it." Smith estimates that he and his fellow workers dispose of some two tons of trash each week. "Some days we have to make as many as three hauls," Smith announced, "which is pretty surprising when you consider the fact that these trucks hold close to 1,000 pounds apiece." Though hauling away two tons of garbage weekly is quite a chore, Mondays provide the biggest headaches for campus garbagemen. Smith admits that people manage to accumulate 217 of the Student Union. All women are invited. CHAPEL HILL ASTRONOMY CLUB will meet in the classroom at Morehead Planetarium to finalize solar eclipse plans tonight at 8. INTERNATIONAL SPOTLIGHT, ISC radio program, will interview the Toronto Exchange participants on their experiences in Canada, tonight from 9-9:30 on WUNC-FM, 91.5 on the dial. ANYONE living in Winston, Connor, Joyner or Granville East who is interested in serving on the WTomen's Honor Court, should contact Sherry Greene at 967-1096. TICKETS for the International Dinners are now on sale at the International Student Center for $2 per person per dinner. The dinners will be held the week of April 3-8, featuring Latin American, Arab, African, European and Far Eastern foods. AIL SECRETARIES NEEP A LITTLE cammHT now ahd then DTH Stiff Fhoio by Woody Clark Students' unbelievable quantities of trash over the weekends. "You wouldn't believe the , amount of newspapers, magazines, cups and sandwich wrappers that pile up between Friday and Monday," the Physical Plant employee chuckled. "Why, I can remember back last semester when we were called over to one of the fraternity houses after a big weekend party. There must have been 50 or more empty beer cans nearly filled up half the back of the truck." Smith claims that though he does not rummage through the garbage he collects looking for salvagable items, but he has run across some pretty amazing discoveries. "I got two good tires out of one bin over on South Campus. One needed to be recapped, but the other had plenty of tread left. I'm still using them on my trailer," he boasted. Although the usual assortment of cast-offs are no more unique than ragged sneakers or empty milk cartons, Smith recalls ushering such items to the town dump as a cracked 10-foot fishing rod, a television set with the picture tube missing, and an overstuffed rocking chair that, thanks to several large holes, wasn't so overstuffed anymore. BURST INTO SPRING, a fashion show by Belk's, will be - held Tuesday, March 10 in the School of Public Health auditorium. Door prizes and refreshments; tickets are All proceeds will go to Inter-Church Council. PROFESSOR V. $1. the F. will WEISSKOPF of M.I.T. speak here Friday, March 6 on "Sizes and Magnitudes" as part of the Duke-UNC Physics Colloquium. M A N A N D ENVIRONMENT: Create a work of art to be displayed in conjunction with the Carolina Symposium. For further information call 933-1013 or go by the Symposium office in Carolina Union. NATIONAL CONFERENCE on political justice: "The Political Use of the Judicial System" at the University of Pennsylvania applications are now available in care of CIRUNA, YM-YWVA building. TICKETS for "Trumpets of the Lord" are now on sale at the Union Information Desk. Tickets for the March 10 production in Memorial Hall are $1.50 and $1 for students.. r jstllXiiiiuus-. m J-J-- -mm I 2:15-4:30-6:45-9:00 NOMINATED FOR 5 ACADEMY AWARDS r i By MARIE PAULL At noon he bounds out for food but w here does he go? Where are the students who used to eat at UNC dining halls eating now? Where wi'l they eat after the spring semester if there are no campus food sen ices at all from then on? "Downtown. one might say. "Where else?" The elsewhere is just as likely to be any place besides downtown. Any convenient spot where a person can deposit his books and sit for a few minutes seems to do. It may be a desk in an empty classroom, a park bench, the stone wall along Franklin Street, or maybe a room in the dorm, where at least one can listen to a favorite record. Music helps make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches tolerable. Some people go downtown. Quick-service places like Hardee's, Roy Rogers, and the Garbage? The biggest surprise "catch" of all, however came not to Smith, but to one of his feilow drivers a few years ago. Backing his truck up to empty one of the large outdoor bins on campus, the driver was shocked to see the top of the grey bin open and a young man frantically climb out and run off. "When Jim investigated," Smith laughed, "he found a couple of rum bottles in the bin. The fellow must have got good and drunk and decided to spend the night in the garbage bin. He'll never know how lucky he was to climb out when he did." Too bad the guy ran off. Smith may have been able to use him, like the tires, on his trailer! Acklund. To -Honor Artist The Art Gallery of Chapel Hill will honor artist, Monique B in sw anger with a reception from 3-5 p.m. Sunday, March 1. Her work will consist of paintings of geometric forms with overlay of color shapes creating spatial concepts from the flat surfaces with contrasting tones often shown on white. Monique Binswanger was born in France in 1943. She studied six years in Paris at the National Academy of Fine Arts, receiving her education in painting from Professor Legeult. She received her degree in 1966. After a year in Vermont, where she participated at group shows at Montpelier and Burlington, Vermont, she lived for two years in Zurich, Switzerland. During that time she participated in a group show at Kilchberg and had two exhibits at Zurich and Basel. She has also worked with a group of young artists on collective paintings, one of which will be shown at the International Biennale in Paris this winter. ' lleitndall was the rxl of dawn and light in S anliiu ian inv lli o1jv . ' c t'"'l Li lJ Lj sml Li J) - t i t i With a Piedmont I.D. card, certifying you're between the ages of 12 and 21. inclusive, you can save about 20! You get a reserved seat, and you can save anytime there are no holiday restrictions! Next trip to Washington, Chicago, New York, Atlanta or over 70 other cities, see your travel agent or call Piedmont. Enjoy 737 fanjet or new Rolis-Royce powered propjet service. And a fare deal! HESM&M MMLWE8 Bunr Chef do & b:!:n business bi?t''f'tn r.oen ar.d two o'clock tty afurroon. Danny Fields., manager of the Burner Chef on WesJ Rosemjr St.. says he h.v$ noticed a marked Ir.crea. in business since the University's caft'teria problems began last spnri. It's no wonder. A hamburger costs 23 cents al the Burger Chef, and french fries are 20 cents. At UNC's Pine Room, a hamburger costs 35 cents, and french frks are 25 cents. Fields is proud of the Burger Chefs efficiency. lf a person knows what he wants, it tikes not more than thirty seconds to have it ready." Hardee's offers a hot dog with chili for 25 cents, french fries for 20 cents and a coke or pepsi for 12 cents while SAGA offers a hot dog. french fries, and a pickle for 60 cents plus a coke for 15 cents. For a change of diet, one can go to the Pizza Inn on East Franklin St. and get all the pizza and salad he can eat for $1.45. The service is prompt, the atmosphere is friendly, and there are gay red tablecloths on which to rest elbows. Yet everyone does not want to go downtown all the time. The food selection becomes monotonous, and the more inexpensive places are often so crowded at lunchtime that many people do not have the time to wait for service, and then eat. The nearer the campus, the worse the crowds. Sutton's Drug Store, in the heart of Chapel Hill, is more crowded at twelve o'clock than Macy's at an after-Christmas sale. Pedestrians often are restricted by short periods between one class and the next, and the books and parcels they must carry for long distances. Drivers have parking problems. Despite their business, the fact is that downtown lunch service has slowed down in recent months. Customers knocking dinner trays in the ,m..u muff ll Ll. I j ' .. m . . - ;. i U i LiLa- i-Jl I - . r1 ; t r -v . r r i MONIQUE BINSWANGER TO OPEN EXHIBIT For several years she worked for the Fashion Houses of Jeanne Lanvin, Nina Ricci, and Leonard, doing patterns for silk scarves. She returned to this country this fall and resides with her husband in Raleigh where he is completing a graduate degree in economics. Her show will run the entire month of March. The public is invited to view her exhibit and meet the artist. ?! . . T" H i , tit r ., t - s t n X.C. Ca.'.uru kUf a.m. and 2 p.m.. don't constitute the rtil trrrx. AUhoirgfc the Cafeteria's frlrd chicken for 0 cents and saU-J for 20 cents compares favorably to the Fine Room's Chic sea Pac for 5 cents a;vt salad for 25 cents. Manager J. P. Wicker says he has noiut1 no increase. "In fact, lunch is decreasing. Food business, now is in apartments and rooms." The owner of nearby Ham's Restaurant agrees with Wkker. Observing the crod of people at newly-opened Hector's, across the street from Harry's, Ralph Mackitn says he doesn't think places like Hector's reflect a significant increase in the number of students eating downtown. Food is costing too much everywhere, and more and more students who are no? eating in University dining hall are keeping food in their residences. "The economy as a whole is in a slump," Macklin notes. If the University closes food serv ices, there will of course h some increase in eating dow ntown, but more and mom people are going to start eating' in their dorms. A lot more people live off campus than used to, anyway, and bringing food from home is. convenient." Hector's is busy because it is novel. Aside from being close; to campus. Hector's offers a menu that includes shrimp or! lobster egg rolls and corn onj the cob. The restaurant has; quick service and reasonable prices for good food. Soft1 drinks are 15 cents and coffee -; is 10 cents; a cheeseburger is 55 cents and a hot dog is 35 cents. In a few months. Hector's novelty may fade, and business slow down. It will probably remain substantial enough to make operation worthwhile, but the restaurant's owner won't become a millionaire from profits in Chapel Hill. GRADUATION! IfWITATIOFJO union loooy 9-4 ORDER OF THE GRAIL mT- ' n n 0 ti

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