Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 17, 1972, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
J I L Tlx 2 Th Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, October 17, 1972 5J- Tues7 Oct. 17 - Wed., Oct. 18 - Thursv Oct. 19 OVER 2,000 TO CHOOSE FROM" WW 3G et your favorites at Big Discounts! J ave up to $3.00! ? Major label LP's! Top artists!? Many, many selections in this special purchase. Classics included! Hundreds of records! Come early for best selection! (OUTSIDE - SIDEWALK) ALSO Thousands of Paperbacks Half -Price or Less Including Hundreds of Harper Torchbooks . TTn Tim rPTT IJ U LUJ vJJ LLi IfNJ I . W.tMiVi jt.; nggj' -r-- J 9 a.m. 4 p.m. "ON CAMPUS ampos CaIeodair Today's Activities "Aging and Hignwiy Sa'ety: The EkSerty in a Mo&iie Society" fe mne of tnis ftis N.C. Symposium on Highway Safety to be -id tocay ana weanesslay at 9 a.m. m tne m itoor Faculty Lou"9e at Dey Man. Stuoentj ana faculty are invited to attend. "Why Bother to Follow a Spiritual Path" will be the topic of the Ecfcanar Discussion Group meeting today at 7 p.m. in 302 Bmgnam. The public s invited. The Curriculum in Operations Research and Systems Analysis and the University Pros? am in Healtn Services Evaluation will present Dr. William A. Remke of the Department of International Health at Johns Hopkins University at 4 p.m. today in room 324 of Phillips Hall. The topic will be "The Thrust of Operations Research in Health Applications." Coffee and tea will be served at 3:30 in room 277. Phillips. Solid State Seminar: Peter J. Silverman will speak on "Fluctuation Effects in the Resistive Transition of Thin Film Superconductors" today at 4 p.m. in room 224 of Phillips Hall. ABSENTEE BALLOT APPLICATIONS are available at the Union Desk today. Free notary service. 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. today at the Student Government office. Coming Activities The Carolina Union Drama Committee is sponsoring special preview performances of the Carolina Repertory Company's new productions. The Skin of Our Teeth preview will be shown Saturday at 8 p.m., and Twelfth Night on Sunday at 8 p.m. Tickets are $1.50 and are available at the Union information desk. A buffet supper will be held at the Wesley Foundation at 6:15 p.m. on Friday. Volleyball will precede the meal. Those who plan to attend should sign up at the Wesley Foundation desk by noon Thursday. There will be no program this week. A slight charge will be asked for the meal. The International Student Center will hold an organizational meeting Thursday in the lobby of Carr dorm. Everyone is invited. The International Student Center will hold its weekly get-together Wednesday from 4 to 6 p.m. This week our special guest will be Dr. John F. Marshall of the UNC Anthropology Department. Come on by to meet UNC's international students and play volleyball. Interested in skiing in New Hampshire over Christmas break? For more information come to the Outing Club meeting at 7:30 Wednesday in the Union. For persons interested in caring for children in their homes there will be a meeting at 10 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 19, at the Chapel of the Cross at 304 East Franklin Street. The meeting will be concerned with explaining the standards required to operate a Day Care Home and plans for providing training and supportive services for day care mothers. This Vaek In The Ftaturt Case Books On t3 v.ittgc CAess Saall collections, including one paperbacks. Plus Ofcf7aht.l Lawbooks Dusty old leather things, dry as a Judge's chuckle, but some hare famous names on the fly leaves, and all are collectable. THE OLD BOOK CORNER 137 A EAST ROSEMARY STREET OPPOSITE TOWN PARKING LOTS CHAPEL HILL, N. C. 27SI4 The Daily Tar Heel is published by the University of North Carolina Student Publications Board, daily except Sunday, exam periods, vacation, and summer periods. No Sunday issue. The following dates are to be the only Saturday issues: September 2, 9, 16 & 23, October 14 & 21, and November 11 & 18. 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: $10.00 per year; $5.00 per semester. Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in Chapel Hill, N.C. 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 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. Murray Pool Business Mgr. Beverly Lakes on A Over. Mgr. There win be a rriing of an Vay rrrrts Thursday at 9 cm. ti tf-e StuOent Union. Ail ca PwS na?vs&!l iti t-;n Wd?Sy, Oct. 18. Chec the buiteJin toa 215 Wo-oten for schedule i and C-i ' ingi. GOD IS NOW Part HI: A Dliiy Wi i.h the Lord Jesus. Carohna Cnrittian Fellowship's Fail Sers. Suhflay. Oct. 22. a! 9 p.m. m the 4th floor Faculty Lounge of Dey Hau. S Ned Matthews of Cresset: Bast Church. Tom Bain9er, the newly elected presoet Of the NCYDC. will soea to the UNC Voan? Democrats Club on Wednesday. Oct. 18. at 7:30 p.m. in 103 Bingham. There will be a business meeting at 7 p. m preceding the speech. Everyone is invited to attend. Durham-Chapel HiH Ski and Sports Club witi meet Thursday, Oct. 19. at 8 p.m. at Smith Lake (east of Ratetgh off the old Wake Forest Road. Is mie). Free beer, set ups and music Items of Interest Students for Coleman Committee Anyone interested in becoming an active participant in the effort to elect A.B. Coleman to the N.C. State Senate please contact Martin BernhoU, 929-8577 or Harold Stevens. 967-4763, Edgar Cayce Study Group forming, information call 929-2249 or 933-7027. For The Carolina Forum is accepting applications now through Oct. 18 for places at the dinners and receptions for Sen. William Proxmire and Bernadette Devlin. Applications may be picked up at the Union Information Desk and returned there no later than Oct. 18. FUN AND GAMES with two and three year olds. Victory Village Day Care Center (which you can reach by campus bus) needs volunteers. You can work with just three or four children, enjoy playing and talking with them on an individual basis, and help them use toys and games that require supervision. The children would appreciate your attention, especially from 8:30 to 10 a.m. If you would enjoy spending this time with them, please call March or Joyce, 929-2662. "Shame and Guilt in Puritan Culture" will be the topic of John Demos when he speaks for a program sponsored by the Graduate History Society on Sunday at 8 p.m. at the Chapel of the Cross. Dr. Demos is professor of history at Brandeis University. There will be a community dinner preceeding the address at 7 p.m. The dinner is open to the public, and all those planning to attend should phone either Alice Shrock (929-3861) or Al Ross (967-30 06). The School of Journalism Colloquim will hear Dr. Maxwell E. McCombs discuss "The News and Political Response: Empirical Evidence of the Agenda-Setting Power of the Press" at 3 p.m. on Oct. 27 in room 204 of Howell Hall. Nomination forms for the Order of the Valkyries, campus women's honorary society, are available at the Union information desk and in 01 Steele. Junior and senior women are eligible based on academic, leadership, service and individual achievement. Forms must be turned in to 01 Steele as soon as possible. The Campus Calendar is a service provided for all Carolina organizations that wish to publicize their activities. All organizations are urged to utilize this service, with the understanding that the DTH will run the calendar as space permits. Announcements must be submitted to the DTH office no later than 3 p.m. in order for them to appear the following day. Campnis briefs . . . Pick up Yacks Today is the day studsrts nay pick up 1972 Yackety Yacks. Subscribers may ge! their yearbooks in the South Lounge meeting room in the Student Union from I to 6 p.m. Student should bring IDs and receipts, if possible. There are no extra copies for sale. Wreck injures 3 Three UNC students were injured in a one-car accident on Manning Drive at 12:04 a.m. Saturday. James Allen Hall. 19, 70S Morrison dorm, was driving a 1972 Ford when it went off the road at a high rate of speed, struck a tree, went down an incline and landed on its top in Craige parking lot. according to Chipel Hill police. Hall was admitted to N.C. Memorial Hospital with a fractured ankle, lacerations on the chin and loss of two front teeth. His condition was listed as stable Monday. Three passengers were in the car in addition to Hall. James Carl Reavis, 19, of Salisbury was admitted to the hospital and held one night for observation. Pattie June Barnes, 18, and Lonnie Wood Farless, 19, both of Morrison dorm, were treated in the emergency room and released. Interviews set Interviews for anyone wishing to participate in the Student Alumni Awareness Program will be held Wednesday and Thursday from 3 to 5 p.m. in Suite C of the Union. Students in the program travel to various North Carolina towns to meet with high school seniors who have already been accepted at UNC for the following year. The meetings take the form of informal rap sessions and present different aspects of campus life such as extra-curricular activities, dorm life, academics and social life. The program was begun last spring as a joint project of the senior and sophomore, classes. However, Susan Clarke, chairman, said students of all classes are urged to participate. The project also sponsors an on-campus phase called the "Pal Program." lyrawiiosgQW OPTICIANS Registered Licensed Opticians Prescriptions Filled - Lenses Duplicated SUNGLASSES CONTACT LENSES FITTED TOO'OO I O New and Larger Quarters In University Square Now Under Construction s JACKSON BROWNE i is coming to UNC! October 19 s1.50 Carmichael University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Tickets at CAROLINA UNION and at DOOR Vfe NOT" OFTEN W CAN 6ET 6 COMPLIMENTS IN ONE PAV fTO11"1 1 ffliX ? FANTASTIC f ) TkJO of them werb EVEN 1NCR: Y KM . I- v o o o z m V) GO c 5 Ms. caucus, yeu., oeitz . ..V. a 711 piyjj - bio uinivGc JMB ORIS w&Y. THSi'VS PEZM fiCT!N6 lire Boys ourrs' ,W7 a te&rr ladv. si MOM P aenwoR, oncssajp that ThBRS APE TkJO KINDS OP PBOPl; HVMM BBN6S AND vJDMcN. ANU kJHtsJ wnw STh2T ffCTim uire "w B0N6S. THY A ACCUSED OF TRYM6 TO & yew...evr... but... um.... SIM0NB DC eeAvvoifts 60T Y0U SUM. i r-1- 1 I ' L 1 i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 17, 1972, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75