The Daily 1st Heel .v.v,v.v,VAV.v.v.ftv.v.v.vwMvKViVw ..v.v.v.y.'.y.v.v.ViV.'.v.'.v.v.v.'.w JSews in brief colt College elects new officers Former student now in commune Thursday. February 17, 1972 n f 1 f 1 i i i 1! M J 11 The respective dormitories of Scott Residence College elected Sam Kimel as governor, Mike O'Neal as president of Avery, Fred Kiger as president of Teague and Margaret Roberts and Scottee Cantrell as co-presidents of Parker in an election Tuesday. Scott Residence College holds its election about two weeks prior to student body elections as normal procedure. In addition to O'Neal, Avery elected Drew Cobbs, vice president; Charlie Woodcock, secretary and Bob Schultz, Avery Advocate editor. Avery senators elected were: Tom Owen and Ronnie "Wildman" Thompson, first floor; Paul D'Elia and Charlie Ivey, second floor; Eddie Franklin and Bill Marsh, third floor; and Lynn Curtis and Robin Luckadoo, fourth floor. Steve Culler and Richard Bradley were elected vice president andi secretary-treasurer respectively from Teague. Senators elected from Teague were Jimmy Brannan and Foster Ockerman, first floor; Sam Autry and Steve Bunch, second floor; and Mike Talley and John Wallston, third floor. Parker elected Jo Ella Walters, vice president; Margie Beazley, secretary; Sharon Caston, treasurer; Nancy Henderson, social chairman and Sharon Leonard and Sharon McLeod, the Women's Athletic Association. Parker senators are Marty Musgrove and Janice Rice; Projects Chairmen, Charlotte Wade and Isabel Patterson; Publicity, Karen Landry and Association of Women Students, Carol Todd. 1 I The elections in all three dormitories I of Scott Residence College are final. piwTO-j ,-7-,-rT ---- - 1, - J A fwril buy wt CtMaM kw prtotMl Fwl MyftMi osrdl I nn4 Am Msfity Ffrsflsffto 4 TITITU.IIUI.Ml W ewTfc " fcjT WMITIWAU. Hit TRIANGLE TIRE CO. liJ-r .s,.riS II JlSIT. 7rone " s00 A-l USED TIRES fnl B;S.clMtionol;!idtn.. WL IW T"' mm matched pain ami acts. Offn '-, GOOD BETTER BEST 203 EAST FRANKLIN ST. (Across from Silent Sam) All Month Special n pnnr ANY FLAVOR Yogurt for morning, noon and nightcap Don't forget our daily specials which in cludes meat, 2 veg., bever age, rolls mm fnlir TODAY: COUNTRY STYLE STEAK A FULL BREAKFAST SELECTION FROM $.60. . HOMEMADE HOT DONUTS $.07 ea. Counselors hold Sunday dinner YM-YWCA Organizers of pre-orientation for 1972 Freshman Camp will meet for dinner at 5:15 p.m. Sunday in the Wesley Foundation. All former campers and others who would like to be counselors are invited. Camp co-directors Nancy Haigwood and Ray Mitchell will discuss plans for this summer's camp, scheduled for Aug. 21-23. Freshman camp is sponsored by the YM-YWCA to give new students a first impression of life at UNC without the formal atmosphere of orientation. Last year the camp program included panel discussions with student leaders, professors and campus ministers. The cost of the dinner is 75 cents. ISC to begin weekly seminars Students with the International Student Center have organized an informal weekly seminar on "International Understanding" to begin at 4 p.m. (today) in the Reading Room of Carr Dorm. All interested persons are invited to attend. Each week a topic will be discussed concerning particular world regions. The seminars will be led by people from those areas, who have studied there or are particularly interested in finding out about them. Village Opticians Prescriptions Accurately Filled Lenses Duplicated Headquarters For Quality Sunglasses Contact Lenses Fitted Contact Lens Accessories John and Lib Southern 121 E. Franklin Street Between Varsity Theatre and Intimate Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Everyone 4 Snakes 8 Escaped 12 Born 23 Young horse 14 Ireland 15 Chinese - pagoda 16 Industrious 28 Ire 20 Metal fastener 21 Guido's low note 22 Pigpen 23 Preposition 27 Garden too! 29 Lad 30 Look pryingfy 31 Near 32 Place 33 Ugly, old woman 34 Pronoun 35 Declare 37 Label 38 Chicken 39 Pit 40 Damp 41 A state (abbr.) 42 Chestnut with white interspersed 44 Hinder 47 A state 51 Siamese native 52 Century plant 53 Narrate 54 Worm 55 Young salmon 56 Great Lake 57 Grain DOWN 1 Pilaster 2 Spare Organized group of teams Genus of maples Offspring Sufficient Wander Sense Illuminated Silkworm A month (abbr.) Enlisted man (colloq.) Latin conjunction Drunkard Negative Heavy volume Unlock Mixture Man's name Insect Sink in middle Strict 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 17 19 22 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 32 33 36 37 38 40 41 43 12 13 15 16 18 21 27 28 29 31 32 35 36 39 42 43 47 48 49 52 155 Distr. by United VHAPPA YA LObJefZiNG YOUR. SCARED OF LOST? I m CO LU z o o a fWjiWnaX tjopf I he's 6ome i reap a fMES'i SCMEaACETu TO LurxlTE HEKI BlOSZAPM OF J ifOvR I ( INTEtftfSJ MIS L 8l06RAfW J ABRAHAM LINCOLN : , A This- week's topic will deal with the United States and Latin American relations. Dr. Fritz Hafer, an American anthropologist who made some of the first studies on Indican cultures in Peru, will be attending. The seminars are being formed due to a lack of "stimulating rapport between student and faculty in most classroom situations," according to ISC representatives. Many of the international students desire to introduce a course on International Understanding into the curriculum next year. People working with the project are undergraduate, graduates and faculty. Community people are also welcome to participate. Refreshments will be served. Students win at Ohio tournament The UNC Individual Events Team won a first-place trophy and three semi-final trophies last weekend in their first tournament competition at Ohio University. John Creagh, a Pollocksville, N.C. junior, and Vicki Wilkof, a freshman from Canton, Ohio, won a first place trophy in the Dramatic Duo competition with an interpretive reading from "The Great White Hope." Three members of the squad won semi-final trophies in other categories: Regjna Whittington, a freshman from High Point, in Persuasion; Sara Brooks, Siler City sophomore, in Poetry; and freshman Benjamin Cameron of High Point in After-Dinner Speaking. Coach Harriet Cherberg, a speech graduate student from New Jersey, said Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle J8QUND f "1m H U R R A vtjA" A S JN M EjZ P L O P 3 S I M SE L L ST U t Mil S ERL Yp ON"; r ab jd I c e P P o SUMS S W T RNES "TJf JST Y L E JR 7 J Chapeau Man's nickname More taut More torrid Squander Pronoun Faroe Islands whirlwind 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 Erase (printing) Simple Ascend Hit lightly Guido's high note Conjunction Man's name 8 10 U 14 17 20 22 23 24 25 26 33 34 37 38 40 41 44 45 46 50 51 7 Feature Syndicate, Inc. I DIDN'T LIKE fT.7H0U6H. eeCAlE THE AUTHOR NEVER MNTkWE 6E0R6B UWN6TCN anp i Ye always been eoKiofc 5 VE'RS LOST. LENP me yovz OVfi6l, MAP MP I LL SEE FX CAN FSue: oor VHERE USE 1 t the showing was "nothing less than remarkable" since the Ohio tourney was the team's first intercollegiate compet;tion. Any undergraduate student interested in joining the UNC Individual Events Team should contact Harriet Cherberg in the Speech Division, Bingham Hail. Race relations to be discussed Miltcn Rankin, a UNC student who has expressed concern over black-white relations, has formed a series of discussion groups beginning today at 7:45 p.m. in room 207 of the Student Union. T want people to get together and simply realize that the race relations of this country must improve and quickly for this country to survive," Rankin said. His idea is an outgrowth of a black-white relations sociology course he took last semester. 'T am not trying to take on the role of a black leader," Rankin said. "I simply want to try to do something about it." Rankin said the meeting today wras to. get ideas on the group's objectives and work on future plans. He expects to speak to Chapel Hill Mayor Howard Lee to receive input from the town toward the groups. A junior transfer from Brevard College, Rankin said he hoped to further the discussion groups into a human relations group and possibly find solutions to some of the problems. He urged Chapel Hill townspeople as well as students to attend the first meeting and help set the group's objectives and define problems. ivr. -ir, lt:.: ntsz urn J. i '. A "7 5r-;. .jjt: ;' 5 oL'j '13 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 building, 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. THAT AlAKK AW HEAP Hl'rTT 2-7 yoi THAT. UjE'Rr LOST. by Mar' Ellis Gibvon Stiff Writer The commune is in experimental community "dedicated to equalitarianism,"' a member of the Twin Oaks commune said Monday night. Former UNC student Sara Eider, speaking at a discussion sponsored by the Carolina Union Current Affairs Committee, said Twin Oaks is modeled on the ideas of psychologist B.F. Skinner. The 48 community members live on a 123-acre farm in Louisa County. Va., Elder said. The group supports itself by farming, working in the "outside world" and with typing for a Charlottesville business. Members also earn money by making rope hammocks and by other crafts. Elder explained. "We're changing things all the time, but one thing we "don't expect to change is the communal treasury," she said. Members of Twin Oaks have no private property "except for a few small things," Elder continued. "Our dedication to equalitarianism is a matter of practicality more than ideology," she added. Elder described the community members as a group from varied LOW DRAFT NUMBER? Representatives of AIR FORCE ROTC will be in Mangum and Granville West tonight 7:30-9:30 To Answer Questions Concerning The AFROTC 2 Year Program ' he Jiuti 103 E. FRANKLIN ST., CHAPEL bis Is It . . . (Thurs., Fri., Sat.) For Drastic Reductions On The Finest In Den's Wear m O Winter Suits O Sportscoats O Dress Slacks O Dress Shirts O Sweaters O Outerwear O Shoes We honor your Hub Charge or your favorite ank Charge Card. backercur.ds with educational levels erade to master degrees. "We ha e a a plann; consensus s stem." she said. Each area such as Jarmir.g. children or animals has a manager who makes all decisions concerning the operation of his area, she explained. In addition, a board of three planners which rotates every six months makes overall decisions. In keeping with the Skinner model, "all adults live in similar quarters," Elder said. The community has planned three children for this year, and a special children's house has been built tor them, she said. Twin Oaks does not have many formal rules for its members. Elder said. She listed the "no dope rule" and the requirement that every member contribute his share of v.ork as two important rules. Each member of Twin Oaks works about 40 hours each week. Elder said. Work is assigned according to a system of labor credits in which the least preferred jobs arc given the most credits. Elder received a master's degree in psychology from UNC. HILL T 1 X Mm 4i!bl! ' rr , & WE OF mmMmM 103 E. FRANKLIN ST., CHAPEL HILL 3-7

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