Veaday, Septsrrter 23, 1970 Pons Two THE DAJLYTAR KEEL 0 MSJfll L and ear TO1 . Processor UMG T1 0 ILVLiL ii y flf' tfi ' fi No, the girls of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority are not hiding. They are alive and well in Nurses Dorm, as the sign says. The new Theta house will not be completed until Sept. 30 and the old Theta house is being renovated by the original owners so the Thetas are temporarily living in one wing of Nurses Dorm. Originally the new Theta house on Rosemary Street was Plaeeftariem Fans UNC News Bureau "Planetarium-goers have changed dramatically in the past twenty years," according to Mrs. Gail Bradley, former Morehead Planetarium secretary, currently updating and processing old files at UNC's public service science education facility. The largest attendance occurred the first' vyeaY the planetarium opened,' with 181 ;470 'people seeing1 the original Zeiss Projector "perform" in fifteen different programs. "Easter, the Awakening" hafbeen seen by 361,688 people, more than any other program ever presented. "Star of Bethlehem" was second, with a total of 294,797. However, "Star of Bethlehem" had the most attendance in any year; 31,863 in 1949. DTH Classifieds For Sale 1969 Norris 22 foot Travel Trailer. Completely self contained. Used 4 times. Low equity and assume loan. 942-1273 Ask for Bill Speer 1 Ox 60 3 bedroom mobile home. Available Oct. l.$120 per month. 929-2854 105 p.m. 1966 Chevrolet, one owner, economical straight-drive six, R&H, $ 725 ; 968-6535 . Sony Stereo System; AMFM cassette player recorder, BSR turntable, amplifier, separate speakers, 5 mo. old excellent condition. $ 3 30 new - will sell for around $250. Call 967-3295. 1969 Austin i-ieaiy sprite. Good condition. :1 zuo and assume 942-6694 night. payrnent. 929-7158 day. 1963 MGB rebuilt motor A transmission. Good tires and top. $800. 1966 160 cc Honda Scrambler. New motor- excellent shape. $290. Call 929-1060. Motorcycle: 1970 650 CC BSA "Lightning" three months old, used only in Europe, recent Check-up. Why slow down for little bikes? Asking $1200. 942-187 4, late evenings best. Wanted: Ride from Raleigh and return. Will pay $1.00 day. Call Ai 833-6772. NCSU area. Help Wanted: Partime work available at student union snack bar. Inquire with O. Kearney. Honda 1970CL4S0 -K3 18 00 mi, red, excellent condition. Call 94 2-4 705. For Sale; 1960 MGA in good condition, new top, good tires, tonneau, and upholstery. Luggage rack. Runs good too. $550. 968-0542. Says Former Secretary The phenomenal attendance during early planetarium years consisted of many "curiosity seekers," interested largely in the beauty and wonder of the physical facility. Arrival of the space age brought recognition of astronomy as a necessary companion and demands grew rapidly for instruciton in basic and advanced astronomy, and related sciences. With N.C. Department of Public Instruction officials, the staff at Morehead instituted "graded school programs" for grades 1 through 1 2. School groups from throughout North Carolina, Virginia and South Carolina now attend by the thousands to profitably supplement their classroom instruction. 1964 3.4 Jaquar Sedan Last classic body styel, smoke green color, perfect condition, immaculately clean $900. Call Raleigh 823-2713 after 6:30. Help Wanted 112 PM, late nights and weekends. Monday thru Friday. Must be 18 and apply in person. Roy Rogers Family Restaurant. 106 Mallette St. For Sale: Office DESKS & CHAIRS. Choose from large stock. We discount 40 and deliver. Petree's Office Furniture, Graham (Opposite Towel Shop on NC 87 to Burlingotn). Motorcycle For Sale. 197 0 Triumph "Trophy 500". Excellent. Save $600. 967-3267 A.M. & Weekend. For Sale! Black Labrador Retriever puppies. Inexpensive, wonderful family dogs and the best duck dogs available. Call Doug Jewell, 933-1163, or come by the DTH office. It's for sale. 1967 MGB convertible only 25,000 miles wire wheels, almost new tires, radio, tonneau cover. $1750 Call Ann Alexander 383-1148 (Durham). Students Europe for Christmas, Easter or Summer? Employment opportunities, economic flights, discounts. Write for information (air mail) Anglo Ameria Association 60a Syle Street, Newport I.W., England. 1970 BSA Royal Star 500 3 months old excellent condition. Only $800. Call Brent Chambers 968-9 074. TVs for sale or rent. 19 inch B&W portables $50 sale price or $9month rent with no deposit. Call 929-6882. Now! Two positions open to deliver newspapers In town. Prefer Married students of grad students only. Good pay. Car Necessary. Call now. 942-5953 or 967-1476. scheduled to be completed in July. Unfortunately, with construction being the way it is, July soon became August, and August, September. But the living room of the new house has been completed so the Thetas will be able to hold sorority rush there. Rush began Tuesday for all sororities on campus. Almost 400 girls are participating. (Staff photo by Lee Unwah) Change "The foresight of Mr. A.F. Jenzano, the director of Morehead, to keep abreast with the changing times can be seen in two important developments," Mrs. Bradley said. "First, in 1959 he qualified Morehead Planetarium for continuous training of all U.S. astronauts. "Second, he has managed Morehead accordingly from 1951 as the only major planetarium to sustain itself only on ticket receipts from the more than 2 million patrons; making Morehead truly a gift, not a burden to North Carolina taxpayers," Mrs. Bradley concluded. Chancellor Committee R eceiving Nominations UNC News Bureau The committee to advise on the selection of a new Chancellor at the University has completed its first stages of consideration and is receiving nominations from a variety of sources. The committee is headed by Ike F. Andrews of Siler City and is screening likely candidates to succeed Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson who will relinquish the position Sept. 1 , 1 971 . The initial meeting was held at Consolidated University President William Friday's offices in Chapel Hill. When the advisory committee has completed its work, the names of three to five persons will be recommended. President Friday will then submit a choice to the Board of Trustees, deriving from recommendations of the committee. The advisory committee is composed of 14 people, including five trustees, six from the University faculty; presidents of the alumni association and the student body; and a representative of the University staff and employes. Chairman Andrews invites any RAM PILLOWCASE SI. 98 . & J&J P. O. Box 9593 Charlotte, N. C. 28205 Send me Ram (Money Order) for S Pillowcases. Name Address City Ar. C. Residents add 37c sales tax c J&J SALES-1970 Special to the DTH Ed. Note: The Carolina Quarterly is a literary magazine made up of contributions by young writers in the area. The, Quarterly is published by nine UNC graduate students. Among the contributors for the magazine is h'illiam Harmon who is a professor in the English Department here and the recipient of the Lamont Poetry Prize for 1970. The Quarterly will be on sale today for fifty cents in front of the Pine Room. Copies will also be available for several weeks in the Intimate and Bulls Head book shops. Following is a special review of the Registration Forms Ready For NSA Test Registration forms are now available for the National Security Agency's Professional Qualification Test (PQT) which is to be given on campus Oct. 10. Interested students should complete the registration forms contained in the agency's PQT Bulletin of Information, which is available in the Placement Service Office, Gardner Hall or the Guidance and Testing Office, 019 Peabody Hall. Deadline for receipt of the application is Sept. 30. The test is designed to provide data which, when combined with college records, recommendations and interviews, will assist in identifying candidates for NSA positions. Unusual and challenging careers are offered by the National Security Agency to college graduates at all levels. NSA's professional staff continues to face new and unique problems requiring such personal traits as integrity, intellectual curiosity and perseverence. Specific academic major is of secondary importance. College graduates with majors from many liveral arts fields are utilized by NSA. Any U.S. citizen who will have a bachelor's degree by February, 1972, is eligible to take the test. Engineers and mathematicians need not take the test, however. They should contact their placement director for an appointment with an NSA representative. alumnus, trustee, faculty member, student or staff member who wishes to submit a name for consideration by the committee. These names may be submitted to Student Body President Tom Bello, a member of the committee. Where possible, such information should include pertinent biographical data and any other information which would aid the committee in its evaluation of the nominee, Andrews said. Nominations should be received by Nov. 1, 1970. The committee also will undertake to formulate a statement of criteria for evaluation of nominees. "Any interested member of the University community who wishes to share with the committee his thoughts on this subject is urged to do so," it was stated. Communications to the committee can be in writing or in person. If anyone wishes to come in person, arrangements can be made by appointment, with interested parties appearing on Friday, Oct. 9, in Chapel Hill between the hours of 2:15 and 5 p.m. Your Ram in school colors. Guaran teed washable. Cannon No-Iron Pillowcase. SI. 98 each. Enclosed is (Check) State Zip Quarterly, written by Michael S. Reynolds, a professor of English at N.C State. If the new Carolina Quarterly is not a literary feast, it is the stuff that feasts are made of. It has none of that thinness that sometimes haunts campus literary productions because the Quarterly is not campus writing. Nor does it push social philosophy; there is no odor of ground ax. The magazine has an even, professional qualith, a system of editorial values concerned only with what is literary and excellent. It is not often that a magazine will find fiction, poetry, and reviews all of which engage the reader. The Quarterly has found all three. Its selection of fiction includes three stories any one of which might have appeared in a national publication had the author's reputation been established. The lead story, "Slide Show" by Joseph Ri bar, deftly turns op-art and cinema verite to a fictional advantage in burlesquing the shooting of Andy Warhol in the manner of Warhol. But the story is more than burlesque, for its satire cuts in several directions. Not only is the event satirized, but also the society which produced it and the medium which records it. Finally, I suspect, the reader himself finds the needle in his ribs. "The Whale Doesn't Live Here Any More" is a prison story which avoids most of the cliches which we have learned to love in that line of fiction. The day-to-day, systematic destruction of the individual is portrayed with local-color realism, but it is not the realism which makes the story. Rather it is the remarkable talent of the author to see prison existence in metaphors that the reader does not expect, jarring the nervous system and preventing the cliched response. In a beaurifully written story, 'The Test," Lawrence Dunning reminds us what pleasure it is to ead a well-made story. The . surgically neat exposition of the male-female conflict takes place on the unlikely battlefield of an intelligence test for a mentally elite society. The husband, who takes the test with his wife to appease her needs, finds himself in a mano-mano struggle. During the three hour test their marriage is anatomized, and the husband learns more about himself than he really wanted to know. OPENING SOON Tentative Date Sept. 25 PEGASUS (Formerly the Cave) If you mourn the passing of the old Tempo, you will feel at home with us BEER SANDWICHES OLD FILM 1-1 2PM Mon.-Sat. Sundays 5-12 (Coffee Shop) 452y2 W. Franklin 968-9337 rjotte having mm M chalotto, having . cech hb mm HARRY'S L rmy ltt&klin Street i If LJ I IL jfl 'my 8w L .T a. mmm 1 X With these three stories, there are ii;o three fine poets at work in The Quarter:, . First there is William Harmon, th just-announced winner of the Lamer Poetry Prize for 1970. In four tnef poems, Harmon displays a talent aware of its tradition yet undismayed by it. Harmon you may read "Ixion" as he objectively boxes the compass of hell, cr glut yourself In the poem "E verve r.e Eating at Once." Along with Harmon ther are Jarr.e$ Baloian and Kathleen Jennings, both of whom are exciting poets. Baloian 's poems are the sort you return to from two paes further on, wondering "is that what he really said?" Miss Jennings' bright, acrid poems explode on contact, are are distinctly female in their point of view. Reviews, on the other hand, are usually skipped by most readers. But if you skip Cherrill Heaton's review cf Christopher Brookhouse's "Rur.mr.g Out," you are missing dessert. Heat on has written a creative review which describes its objective through widening circles of recognition until the reader not only wants to read the novel, he also wants to read more of Heaton. Two other members of the North Carolina State English Department, Tom Walters and Rollin Lasseter, also have solid reviews in the issue. Walters gives a sensitive reaction to Guy Owen's latest novel "Journey for Joedel." Lasseter reviews Carolinian Thai Stem Jr.'s . recent book of poetry , "Journey Proud." 5c to 2c COPY QUICK 133 Vi E. Franklin Above N. C. Cafeteria 929-4028 THE 452 W. Franklin 967-1 510 11:30 a.m. -Midnight Luncheons Snacks Dinners LIVE ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT 9:30 JILL CANNADA THURSDAY Poetry Reading, 9 p.m. JAMES RIDDLE FRIDAY 9:30 & 10:30 JAN DAVIDSON Banjo-Guitar J .3 - IS - i