Friday. December 10. 1971 The Dairy Tar Heel 5
News in brief
APO schedules annual book co-op
FILMS
TIVM
a 150 minuto rotroopoctlvo -timeless
cartoon classics
I w.
4
service
books
Student
Alpha Phi Omega (APO)
fraternity will 'begin taking
Tuesday for the annual APO
oook io-op set for after the holidays.
Students may brir.g books to 207-09
Student Union from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
throughout the exam period.
The fraternity will continue accepting
books during the sale.
The co-op is designed to give students
a chance to sell books to other students
other than through Student Stores.
Students set their own prices, and 10
percent of the proceeds goes to
scholarships.
The book co-op will sell books from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. Jan. 12-17 in the Union
South Lounge.
Union slates
creative art
'I he Union Gallery Committee will
hold a Creative Art Night at 8 p.m. today
m room 204 of the Union.
l inger paints, dayglow paints, crayons
and paper will be provided. "All you need
to supply," said Hank Wall, committee
chairman, "is the creative urge."
Wall hopes to display the results of the
evening in the Union following the
"artistic free-for-all."
Angel Flight
gives gifts
Members of Angel Flight, the female
auxilary group to the Air Force ROTC
unit, has provided 75 Christmas gifts for
underprivileged girls in the community.
Margret Morris, operations officer, said
the 10 "Angels" made "stocking stuffers"
each valued at about a dollar for
Christmas House, a project of the Chapel
Hill Jaycces.
The project was one of three during
the year. Members also act as hostesses to
Haymakers productions and they will
donate supplies to an orphanage in
Vietnam.
Miss Morris said Angel Flight is the
only campus organization to provide a
gift for all the girls in the Christmas
House project.
UNC students
go to Toronto
Members of the Toronto Exchange
from UNC will leave Jan. 5 for a week in
Toronto.
Thirty-two UNC students will travel
by bus on the trip. Fach yeai, students
are chosen from UNC and the University
The Daily Tar Heel is published by the
University of North Carolina Student
Publications Board, daily except Sunday,
examination periods, vacations and
summer periods.
Offices are at the Student Union
buildmg, Univ. of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone
numbers: News, Sports 933-1011;
933-1012; Business, Circulation,
Advertising 933-1163.
Subscription rates:
$5.00 per semester.
$10.00 per year;
Second class postage paid at U.S.
Office in Chapel Hill, N.C.
Post
The Student Legislature shall have
powers to determine the Student
Activities fee and to appropriate all
revenue derived from the Student
Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student
Constitution). The budgetary
appropriation for the 1970-71 academic
year is $28,292.50 for undergraduates
and $4,647.50 for graduates as the
subscription rate for the student body
($1.84 per student based on fall semester
enrollment figures).
The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to
regulate the typographical tone of all
advertisements and to revise or turn
away copy it considers objectionable.
The Daily Tar Heel will not consider
adjustments or payments for any
advertisement involving major
typographical errors or erroneous
insertion unless notice is given to the
Business Manager within (1) one day
after the advertisement appears, or
within one day of the receiving of tear
sheets, of subscription of the paper. The
Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect insertion of
an advertisement scheduled to run
several times. Notices for such correction
must be given before the next insertion.
of Toronto for the exchange. The
students from Toronto visited UNC Nov.
4-10 this year.
The UNC exchange members are
paired with a student from Toronto who
will accomodate them during their stay.
They will return to Chapel HU1 Jan. 12.
Workers strike
Allen, O'Hara
The electrical and plumbers' unions
working on new construction at
University Square have struck, charging
Allen and O'Hara Co., contractors for the
building, with "exploiting labor."
J.D. Rigsby, business agent for the
carpenters' union which has refused to
cross the other two unions' picket lines,
said the Memphis-based Allen and O'Hara
has failed to keep its agreements with the
unions.
The company, which is constructing a
six-story office building, previously
agreed to pay proper wages and fringe
benefits, he said, but the contractors
"have not yet kept their bargain."
"What it amounts to is these people
coming down here building this building,
taking advantage of the people, and
trying to hire them for as little as
possible," Rigsby said.
"We are very concerned about the
wages they are paying," he added. "We
want them to pay the wages."
The company has warned workers to
be back on the job by noon today or the
company will hire non-union labor,
Rigsby said.
He said the law is presently on the side
of the contractor because of a
technicality in the way the picket line
was set up.
Rigsby said he has urged his men to
return to work but apparently they will
not until the company resolves the wage
and fringe benefits dispute.
UNC to build
parking lot
University property on Park Place will
soon become a temporary parking lot,
according to Allen Waters, director of
operations and engineering for the
University.
Waters said an administrative building
may be built on the lot in the near future.
"No permanent plans for use of the area
have been made at this time," he added.
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
Six houses were moved from the area
last week. The houses were put up to:
bids this fall.
Walter Hamilton, director of
Phvieal Plant taid rersons
purchased the structures were responsible
v,
Hi w
no
a
the
for relocating the houses.
Waters called the land on Park Pia
potential expansion location for
University."
He said the amount of time the land
will remain a parking lot before a
permanent building is constructed will
depend on the facilities and resources
available for University expansion.
Alpha Delta Phi
ATO give party
Alpha Tau Omega (ATO) fraternity
and Alpha Delta Phi sorority sponsored a
Christmas party for 25 children from the
Chapel Hill-Carrboro community
Wednesday at the ATO house.
The children were picked from a local
training school by their teacher as "the
more deserving" of the class. They were
from 6 to 12 years old.
The party was held from 4 to 5 p.m.
Santa made a surprise visit to give the
children gifts.
Jobs offered
UNC Canadians
Canadian students at UNC interested
in "Operation Retrieval," a program for
Canadian students studying abroad, may
secure information about developments
and job opportunities in Canada at the
University Placement Office in 211
Gardner.
"Operation Retrieval," directed by
The Canadian Department of Manpower
and Immigration, assists students and
Canadian employers in contacting each
other.
Jewelry box
lost in Morocco
Dean of Men Fred Schroeder has
information concerning a jewelry boxi
believed to be lost by a UNC coed last
summer in Morocco.
Schroeder said Thursday he received a
Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
letter before Thanksgiving from a man
who said a UNC coed asked him to held a
jewelry box hi!e he was in Morocco last
summer, but the girl did not retrieve the
box. which contains some jewelry.
The man hopes to return the box and
jewelry, and anyone who has lost the
items should contact Schroeder in 01
Steele Building.
1 Brewer's yeast
5 Skin ailment
9 Hold back
11 Blemishes
13 Pronoun
14 Baton
16 Symbol for
tellurium
17 Pigpen
19 Dined
20 Insect
21 Part of food
23 Knock
24 Gull-like bird
25 Shore birds
27 Scorches
29 Beam
30 Inlet
31 Append
33 Liquefies
35 Entreaty
36 Guido's high
not'
38 Places
40 Sum up
41 Pair
43 Posed for
portrait
44 Note of
scale
45 Wise
47 Parent
(colloq )
48 Hosts
50 More vapid
52 Cook
slowly
53 Verve
DOWN
1 Improve
2 Near
3 Ethiopian
title
4 Rodents
5 Solar disk
6 Vehicle
7 Symbol for
nickel
8 Gps in
9 Piece of
dinnerware
10 Approaches
11 Walks
12 Observed
15 Pa rent -teacher
organization
(init)
18 Longed for
20 Chastises
22 Climbing
plant
24 Caudal
appendages
26 Caustic
substance
28 Before
31 Trees of
birch family
32 African ground
squirrel
33 Clubs
34 Part of
plant -
B S P"T S SriSlPjEjT
6 W E L PURE
S M T E MJC e e l U
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35 Brazilian
estuary
37 Young boy
39 Heavenly
body
41 Concoct
42 Heraldry:
grafted
45 Baker's
product
46 Hindu
cymbals
49 Mountain
(abbr.)
51 Note of
scale
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Christmas songs
slated tonight
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The Carolina Union Muse ar.J Soci3l
committees will jointly sponsor 3
Christmas Carol sing at 7 p.m. today m
the Union's South Lounge.
Everyone is invited to participate and
partake of the free hot chocolate.
The assembled grcup will sing on the
Union premises, and then, according to
Music Committee Chairman Jamie Rice,
the carolers will probably tour the
campus areas.
Lyric sheets will be provided at the
Union. Tentative program selections
include: "Silent Night," "First Noel,"
"Hark, the Herald Angels Sing" and other
traditional carols.
"Singing harmony is encouraged," says
Rice, "but we don't expect more than a
combination of voices."
The Union will provide piano
accompaniment.
Checks service
reminds students
Students needing extra money for
Christmas should cash several different
checks on different days at the Student
Stores' check cashing service if they need
more than the $25 per day check cashing
limit, Student Stores officials said
Thursday.
Many students attempt to cash $50 or
$60 checks the day they leave Chapel
Hill, the officials said, but the service is
unable to cash such large checks.
Student Stores officials said the $25
limit was set several years ago to spread
the , chicle cashing service's limited
resources to as many students as possible.
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153 East Franklin
HANDCRAF i ED GOLD and SILVER JEWELRY
BY A FAMOUS DESIGNER at prices you won't believe!
CLOTHES WITH PAZAZZ FOR MEN & WOMEN
UNUSUAL GIFTS FOR THAT SPECIAL
PERSON ON YOUR LIST
COME BACK AROUND CAUSE YOU'LL
HAVE TO SEE IT TO BELIEVE IT!
OPEN 9 a.m.
ALSO OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY AFTERNOONS
A LITTLE STOCKING
STUFFER FROM "RALPH"
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