Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 29, 1971, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Daily Tar Hwl Friday. October 29. 1971 News around campus ami Alinsky to speak at UNC Saul Alinsky, community organizer from Chicago, will speck at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Great Hall of the Student Union. Alimky's speech is the fourth in a series sponsored by the Carolina Forum. Alinsky, director of the Industrial Areas Foundation, is an advocate of mass organization, which is detailed in his most recent book, "Rules for Radicals." His activities include the "Back of the Yards" Council, Woodlawn Organization in Chicago and the use of stock proxies to challenge corporate power in Rochester, N.Y. Alinsky's organizing attention has now turned to the American middle class. From his 40 years' experience, he has concluded one must work inside the system to wrest power from it. Alinsky will speak at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday on the Duke campus. Yack pictures being taken Mark Dearmon, a freshman from Kannapolis, N.C., has been appointed business manager of the Yackety Yack by the Publications Board. "Mark's primary operation as business manager will be with the subscription 1 - ' DTH ADS WORK drive," said Charles Gilliam, chairman of Publications Board. This year, the Yack is being primarily funded by subscriptions for the first time. Dearmon was editor and business manager of his high school yearbook. He joined the Yack staff this fall, serving as organizations coordinator. "I am very pleased with the appointment," said David Collins, Yack editor. "He is very capable, having had a lot of experience in the past. "He is one of the most enthusiastic people on the staff," Collins added. "We enjoy working with him." Yack selects business head Appointments for student pictures in the 1972 Yackety Yack continue from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every weekday through November 22 in the Yack Office, Suite D, Student Union. Portraits will be made this Monday through November 23 from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. "I want to remind students to make their appointments as soon as possible," said Dave Collins, Yack editor. Students may buy $6 subscriptions to the Yack at the same time they make their appointments. Proper dress for the pictures is "however the person wants to dress," Collins said. Although every student who has his picture taken will 2ppear in the Yack, a student does not have to buy pictures. Portraits may be ordered, however, from Stevens Studios. Jaycees slate Halloween fete The Chapel Hill Jaycees will sponsor their free annual Halloween carnival from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Saturday in the Eastgate Shopping Center parking lot. The carnival is geared towards young children and will include fortune telling, apple bobbing, ring toss, a fishing well and costume prizes in several categories. Al Franusiszin, publicity chairman, indicated that in previous years the response had been "very enthusiastic." He expressed hope this year's carnival would be as successful as those in the past. Talk says Indian women more free Women in India are more liberated than their American counterparts, said Mr. N.K. Singhi Tuesday to an audience of students and faculty in the Alumni Building. In fact, he said, Indian women are being accepted in all walks of life - the shou d spen u J a on nrsus c m? (An important question deserving of a straight answer. We'll risk one:) You should probably spend $644 on our Advent Sansui J P.E. Stanton system. Why are we so sure? The system we have for $644 is not just a good value (although we do think it's actually the best value avail able in hifi equipment.) Nor is it just a question of its sounding "good for the mone." Our Advent Sansui I P.E. Stanton system is unique among all the systems that can be put together: it is a stereo radio phonograph system that is nothing less than the right, completely satisfying choice for most people with a demanding interest in both music and sound at a price far lower than such a sytem would have cost just a few years ago. An ambitious claim to be sure. But one which, from experience, we are not afraid to make. Our $644 system will do the following for you: It reproduces the entire frequency range of all music, without annoying coloration or distortion, at levels which will comfortably fill your listening room with sound. (Wagner ians and acid-rock freaks not excluded.) It sounds convincing not only on the best recordings, but on the great majority of recordings and broadcasts of all kinds. It has enough controls and features to satisfy your needs, without making you pay for unnecessary frills. (There's ample flexibility for adding such niceties as a tape deck or addition al speakers.) Its performance and durability are such that it's highly unlikely you'd want to change any of the component for a very long time. It's fully guaranteed for five years by our service department. The Advent Loudspeakers have over and over again proved true the claim originally made for them: they pro vide the kind of performance associ ated with speakers then and now costing much more. The Sansui 1000X AMFM Stereo Receiver is yet another example of the wonderful way your inflated dollar now buys much more real perform ance in hifi equipment than ever before: 28 wattschannel RMS, with less than .8 distortion, across the entire audio range. Sensitive FM per formance permits the greatest number of stations to be received in tru ly I isten able form. The P.E. 2038 Automatic Turntable does its job smoothly and reliably; its heavy platter turns records at a con stant speed, quietly. There is a gentle changing mechanism and a convenient cueing control. The Stanton 500EE Cartridge transmits all the sound that is on the record, and at a record saving 112-gram tracking force. Its excellent high frequency capabilities com plement the fine high frequency char acteristics of the Advent Loudspeakers and the Sansui 1000X Receiver. n n STEREO CENTER 113 North Columbia St 3423162 civil service, rr.ed.crr.e a.-.d the u:ve::tv - without ar.y restar.ce from, the en. In da, gave a s--rr.rr.ary cf the pc-:::cr. of the Indian women from the Yedic per:: J c. :000 B.C.) to the prefer.:. V:er. had been equal to males m the Ved:; p-vr.od. but. for a number cf ears, that condition Mrs. Sheila Jam. an emp:oe o: Carolina Population Center, a'.fo gae a presentation at the meeting. She said although Indian women hae become almost equal to men in urban areas. the still suffer from severe deprivations. Bridge resul for Monday The results of the Monday Carolina Bridge Club game are: On the North-South sides. Jim Hughes and Henry Rich secured first place; Mortin Dillon and Jim McClure, second: Joe Hoseman and Larry Kupper, third: and J.A. Gould and H.M. Oeung. fourth. On the East-West teams, Uvehn Himelick and Lynette Warren gained first place: Cynthia Deaton and Glenn Schnupper, second: and Barbara Stern and Sharel Surles, third. Fourth place was a tie between Crouse GrayGene Stallmgs and Charles LunsonDavid Birnbaum. 'Frankenstein to be shown The UNC Reader's Theatre will present Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" at a Halloween night in the Union Coffee House Saturday. There will be two performances, at 9 p.m. and at 10:30 p.m. The Reader's version of the classic horror tale is radically different from the ever-popular film version, according to Barbara MacKesson, one of the directors of the production. "It's not traditional," she said. "Dr. Frankenstein projects himself into the monster . . . it's a kind of Jekyll and Hyde situation." The reading is adapted and directed by George K. Thompson, Pat Jarrard, and Barbara MacKesson. The cast consists of Randy Mims as Victor Frankenstein, Jim Hackman as the monster, and Truitt Blassingham, Paula Gupton and Louis Harrington in supporting roles. Admission is S.25 including refrehsments. ni ii il il .r I u l. .,.., ..,.,.... j i., .., T,.,i i i , - v holds h Monday UNC Homecoming Queen Ee Fragakis (I.), cheerleaders Rabbit Giles (in bo Annis Arthur and Senior Class President Lee Hood Capps (r.) stand with nuir.i senior class will be selling on Franklin Street today. Service soro rit y rus The Gamma Sigma Sigma Service sorority will hold informal rush from 7 to - p.m. Monday in the South Lounge of the Student Union. All undergraduate women on campus are invited to attend. "Our purpose is to be a service organization for the campus and community." said Gwyn Duncan, pledge mother. "We aren't a social group. . .."We would like everyone to come to find out what the organization is for and to meet the people in it," she said. The sorority was organized on the UNC campus a few years ago by Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity and the American National Gamma Sigma Sigma Service Sorority. M;-e?:rc arc 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays in th !! ;: Connor dormitory. The sorority has spor.red p.:rtu the children's ward at N'.C. Me: Hospital and worked with APO Campus Chest last spring. T?.. opened information booths .im! newspaper subscriptions d i orientation. "We need more members," Duncan said. "We are try ing to work national project now m public health some time in the future we want to a first aid course on campus." NEED A TICKET? WHAT KIND OF TICKET YOU ASK? HOW ABOUT A TICKET TO LEON RUSSELL AT DUKE SATURDAY NIGHT AT 8 p.m. TICKETS $3, $3.50, and $4. AVAILABLE IN CHAPEL HILL AT When You Get Your Ticket Why Not Get a LEON RUSSELL Album for ONLY ALSO TO MAKE THINGS EXCITING NEW DOORS LP "Other Voices" 5.98 series ON LY NEW MAMAS and PAPAS LP "People Like Us" 5.98 series ONLY 2) (Hsl I SERAPHIM AND ODYSSEY CLASSICS LVcoj PER DISC prices good through Sunday NOTE: Norman Strongly Recommends This LP, And We Ask You, Could 50 Million Frenchmen Be Wrong? " You 're Into Music, Get Into The Record Bar Open 10 a.m. 10 p.m. kdkB Qmp Henderson Str ee I - id ring NUss on a . and H 1 I Chapel Hill
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 29, 1971, edition 1
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