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Wednesday, March 4, 1970 THE DAILY TAR HEEL President Of UN General Aembl; HP mme j&roofts .1 o. ooe i'M s a y THERESA MERRITT heads an all-star cast in James Weldon Johnson's 'Trumpets of the Lord," an adaptation of "God's Trombones." Tickets for the March 10 production are now on sale at the Union Information Desk. Prices for UNC students are $1.50 and $1. Are There Any Tall Girls Here Are there any tall girls at Carolina? DTH cartoonist Bob Glenn has been asking this question for several months now in his cartoons. It's not an inside DTH joke ;as many students suspect, but an honest appeal, said 6 foot-seven Glenn. "I just want a tall girl to o dance with my back's killing ;me," Glenn laughed. He uses ''5 cartoons to advertise because "my cartoons are an .extension of my frustrations." Has there been any response? "I've had three nibbles, but I don't blame them for not coming back. Who wants to hang around the DTH office? - If there are any more tall :!0shjn the Carolina Sea, Bob is iiisuaUy at the DTH Office every afternoon, diligently drawing his cartoons. ,. "It really bugs me that there aren't any tall girls!" CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS -Regret 4-Ducklike bird ' 8-Resort 11. Young salmon 12- Courageous - person 13- Bushy clump l4,Hypothetical . force 15-Spanish for "river" 17-Hot 19-Falsehood 21-Unit of energy 23- Meadow 24- Lounge about 26-Period of time 28-Face of watch 31-Marsh 33-Exist 35 Born 36 Paid notice 38-Spiritualists' meetings 41 - Conjunction . 42- Rocky hill 44- Hairpiece 45- Part efface 47-Athletic group ' 49-Things, in law 51 -Station 54-Dance step 56-The sun 58-Definite article 59 Stage whispers 62-Move from side to side 64- Conjunction 65- Conducted 66- Boundary 68-Part of stove 70- Bitter vetch 71- Man's name . 72- Footiike part DOWN 1- Wireless 2- ChaWean city 3- Be mistaken 4-Task 5- Faroe Islands whirlwind 6- Worthless leaving 7- lnstrument 8- Stretch 9- Kawaiian rootstock 10- Total 11 - Take a vote 16-That is (abbr.) 18-Crimson 20-Fairy 22Farms 25-French plural article 27-Part of circle 29- Roman bronze 30- Sign of zodiac 32-Recent 34-tamprey 36Unit of Siamese currency 37-Female deer 39- Ventilate 40- Drink slowly 43 46 48 50 52- 53- 55 T?" 20 21 " 22 23 ' 24 25 H 26 27 28 29 30 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 "4T"46 3gfe 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 hhp n5 n3 59 60 " 61 62 63 64 65 . 66 67 gvj68 69 w 1 mn 1 .( IS FILLED OJITH J TH19 AMNUTE LEFT FST GIVE 3-V i TALL BOB WANTS TALL GIRLS Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle - Swift!y flowing part of river - Vessel - lnsane - Seeded Footwear(pl.) Gull-like bird - Of the same material . 57-Note of scale - 59-Beverage 60- Weight of India 61 - Title of respect 63-Republican party (init.) 67-Compass point 69-Brother of Odin GA,Ml lAMjOiNlGI iTjAjW S H IR E M;L O.PCfs E E tIaTjpie ni :p aiH:a4 eiifeijgufepc e NHS Rime TTXJ9ipr -i A P :i; 1pati isjE lIl jg FjUjR R E P t TSfEIS TIEjP EINiPi jTiE'EfTlH; IPRIY A Distr. b United Feature Syndicate, Inc. f 1 DBiAHP to em TUS HEAP CZACLC I r m -a i m m m mm m. . . - v i 11 v r TAixf II )i Wf-?.1 ' - . ' I -5 1 r - f i : ' J- L- Her Excellency Angie Brooks, President of the UN General Assembly (24th Session), will be speaking in Chapel Hill Monday, March 9 at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Sponsored by the Carolina Union's Current Affairs Committee, the ISC, and the Carolina Forum, and as a personal friend of Dr. Frank Porter Graham, Miss Brooks is coming to UNC to speak on "Three Dimensions for the 70s: Decolonization, Disarmament and Development.' Angie Brooks is a native of Virginia, Liberia, where she was born in 1928. She became interested in the legal profession in her teens, eventually becoming Liberia's first practicing lady lawyer. Her choice was no easy one because not only was there no law school in the country at the time, but women were not even accepted as legal practitioners. With assistance from family friends, Miss Brooks was able to study in the United States. She received a BA. from Shaw University in Raleigh and a law 7 Union Events There will be a wide assortment of programming sponsored by and in the Carolina Union during the next week. The Quiz Bowl begins Monday, March 9, at 7 p.m. Schedules for the marches are available at the Information Desk. James Weldon Johnson's "Trumpets of the Lord" will be presented Tuesday, March 10 at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Tickets are now on sale at the Union Information Desk at $1 and $1.50 for UNC students. Dope and Productivity: A Drug Symposium, will be held on campus. March 8-12. Information is now available at the Information Desk. The Current Affairs Committee, with the ISC and the Carolina Forum, present Her Excellency Angie Brooks, President of the United Nations General Assembly. She will speak on "Three Dimensions for the 70V. Decolonization, Disarmament, and Development," at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall Monday, March 9. F degree from the University of Wisconsin. In addition, she has studied at London Universiy and has degrees from Howard University and Liberia University. As a delegate from Liberia to the United Nations since J A ANGIE BROOKS By MOLLY GROGAN If you've seen all the local flicks three times; if your team's losing the ballgame on television; or if you can't think of anything new to do on a Saturday afternoon, such as March 7 , why not watch an eclipse? After all, you won't get another chance like this one for 360 to 400 years. The reason for interest in this particular eclipse is that the path of totality, in which the sun will be completely Campus INTE R NATION A L STUDENT CENTER will present the final program of the African Colloquium tonight at 8 o'clock in the Carolina Union. The discussion will cover economic development in Africa. CHAPEL HILL ASTRONOMY CLUB -will meet for the last time before " the eclipse tonight at 8 o'clock in "the : classroom of the Morehead Planetarium. ANY WOMAN who needs a ride to the Women's Conference in Durham on Thursday and Friday should contact FLM 27 at 933-2720 or stop by the literature table in the Y Building from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. ECONOMICS 31 make-up examination (Dr. Benavie) will be given Thursday from 7-10 p.m. in 103 Hanes. PROFESSOR V.F. WEISSKOPF of M.I.T. will speak on Friday on "Sizes and Magnitudes" as part of the joint Duke-UNC' Physics . Colloquium. The professor will speak at 2 p.m. in room 215, Phillips Hall. CAROLINA UNION ACTIVITY CHAIRMEN and club presidents must compose a resume concerning the club to be turned in to Carol Spruil in Suite C of the Union. Include in the resume the following items: 1) club president's name, room and telephone number 2) club entrance requirements and 3) club objectives, functions and available facilities. These facts will be used in compiling the student activities section of next year's student handbook. MAN AND ENVIRO NMENT: create a work of art photographs, drawings, three dimensional objects to be displayed in conjunction with the Carolina Symposium (March 15-19). For further information call 933-i013 or THE HEAP BEAGLE (5 NOT 5EBNS ANIONS 10 W. i JL GIL - f 1954, she has sened on numerous committees and was the first woman ever to be President of the UN Trusteeship Council in 1966. Miss Brooks has been Liberia's Assistant Secretary of State since 195S and has also served as her country's vice president. She is now the second woman to be General Assembly President. Along with her many professional responsibilities Angie Brooks has made time to act as foster mother to some 47 Liberian children. Some other topics on which she speaks indade 'The Impact of Youth on International Affairs" and 'The Increasing Importance of Women in International Affairs", thus bringing her concern for world politics and her dynamic character as a woman together. blotted out by the mo n, centers on a line which begins in Perry, Fla., cuts through Elizabethtown and Greenville, and ends in the North Atlantic. This means that for the first time since 1900, North Carolinians can see this once-in-a-lifetime spectacle from their front yards. Providing the weather cooperates, and weather experts say the odds in North Carolina are the best bet of any other U.S. area in the total eclipse belt, observers in the southeastern part of the state Calendar go by the Symposium Office in the Union Building. INTENSIVE LANGUAGE STUDY program is held weekly at the ISC Building. Languages which are taught include Spanish (Monday 1-2 p.m.; 2-3 p.m.), French (Tuesday 2:30-3:30 p.m. and Thursday 2-3 p.m.), Portuguese (T.usday;:and-Thursday 5:30, p.m.) , and German (Tuesday FOUM .. si f m . N .-- ' A -- .If! I 1 I ! ROGER HOWELL as Dracula and Mary including Friday's 11 p.m. special are available Pope as Lucy Sewell star in Carolina at the Ptaymaker's Office or at Play maker's DRACULA which opened Tuesday LedbetterPickird. night, Tickets for the other will experience mid -eclipse about 1:30 pjn. In Greenville the first contact begins at 12:14 p.m. when the moon's silhouette first begins to slide across the edge of the sun, and by 1:32 p.m. the sun will be completely covered. The totality lasts about three minutes and by 2:49 p.m. the eclipse will be over. Although the moon completely "covers" the sun, there will not be total darkness because of the light in the sky reflected from other areas not Eve re 3-4 p.m.). The program is free to UNC students. For more information or to enroll in one of the sessions, go by the International Student Center. CAROLINA UNION GALLERY COMMITTEE is sponsoring a one-man show of the works of Richard Kinnaird in the South Gallery of the Union. The ' UNC art professor's exhibit will be.jon view until March 19. .. , - h V X , v, " jS 1 1 - - -! 3 y ... ..- . , . . "1 V performances experiencing total eclipse. Chapel Hill will have a 98 per cent eclipse, which will begin only minutes after the Greenville time. If you want to see the eclipse properly, come prepared. The National Society for the Prevention of Blindness warns against the effects of the sun's infra-red rays, which burn the retina in a painless but permanent fashion. Certain protective devices do not protect smoked glass, sunglasses, and exposed film do not block the rays. The Society recommends the indirect way to view the eclipse using two pieces of cardboard. "Make a pinhole in one; and with the sun at your back focus the eclipse image through the pinhole board onto the second cardboard. Adjust the size of the image by changing the distance between boards." So when the Saturday doldrums hit you March 7, don't complain that nothing new ever happens. This may be the most spectacular sight you ever see but without the proper protection,, it , ..could easily be the' last. ' ' , , WJL 11 lipse ELECTRA". 110 reduced 42.50 : i : v it - SIX .A r7z. V f I 4 U C3 U&&(k(&&&(ls on cappus " r:o:::::4TEDFCi o I r. t ,.4 1 ; GP lea V Hon Shooing i r l SHOWS: 12:35-2:43-4:58 .. 7:16-9:34 Telephone 489-2327 LL I ELECTRAh210 reduced 55.00 ALL MACHINES REDUCED LIMITED QUANTITY
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 4, 1970, edition 1
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