The Daily Tar Heel
Campos Activities Caleoudar
Today's activities
CREW FOR SPRING There will be a
meeting of all those interested in rowing or
coxing next semester at 7 p.m. tonight in Room
2 13 of the Union or call 957-43 1 1.
Christian Science Lending Library will be
held from 24 p.m. today in the Union. A
lesson is available on "God, the Preserver."
Check the lobby schedule for the room
number.
Beta Gamma Sigma, the national honorary
scholastic fraternity in business administration,
will initiate 22 undergraduates and 15 graduates
at ceremonies to be held at 4:30 p.m. today in
Old Carroll 301.
The last general meeting of the BSM will be
held tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Room 111
Murphy.
The UNC Physics Geology joint
colloquium will present Professor John M.
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Chapel Hill
Thursday. December 7, 1972
Dennison of the UNC Geology Department
today at 4 p.m. in Room 264, Phillips. He will
speak on "Geothermal Energy." Coffee and tea
will be served at 3:3C in the lounge.
Dr. Jean H. Futrell of the University of Utah
wil" speak on "Recent Developments in
Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometry" at the
Chemistry Department colloquium, today at 4
p.m. in 207 Venable Hall. Coffee will be served
in the lower lobby at 3:30.
Coming activities
Physiological verification of Transendental
Meditation will be discussed at a lecture for
adults on Wednesday, December 13, in Orange
Savings and Loan on Rosemary Street, at 3
p.m.
Professor Eberhard Riedel of Duke
University wil! speak on "Renormalization
Group Approach to Critical Phenomena (II)"
Tuesday, December 12 at 4 p.m. in 228 Phillips
Hall.
The Durham Civic Chorale Society of Allied
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Arts will present a concert Sunday, Decen-.ber
10, at 4 p.m. in Duke Chapel. Works by
Wolfgang Mozart and Britten directed by
Robert Porco. Tickets are now on sale at
Record Bars and at Page Auditorium Box
Office, S2 for adults and SI for all under 13.
"Star Adventures," a puppet show produced
by Greenwillow School, wtll be presented at 3
p.m. on Saturday and Sunday at the
Community Church, Purefoy Road, Chaoel Hill.
Tickets will be sold at the door for 50 cents for
children and 75 cents for ad ults. Proceeds will go
to the Greenwillow School Tuition Aid Fund.
The Opeyo Dancers will present "Through
the Years" Friday, December 3 at 8 p.m. in
Memorial Hall. Admission is free and the public
is invited. The program will be sponsored by
the Black Student Movement.
The UNC Frisbee Team will practice the
coed sport cf Ultimate Frisbee Sunday,
December 10 at 4 p.m. on the Astroturf at
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Items of interest
UNC Karate Club Practice will be held as
usual during finals week: 5:30 in the Tin Can
Monday and Thursday. Practices during
vacation will be arranged; be sure to attend,
inquires: Jim White, 933-3041.
Mayor Howard Lee of Chaoel Hill will speak
at the Division of Administrative Sciences
ForumLecture Series at Shaw University in
Raleigh on Wednesday, December 13, at 2:30
p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom. Lee's
topic will be: "The Role of the Black Public
Administrator."
An examination will be given on January 9
at 3 p.m. in Room 324 Phillips Hall to
determine if a student will be exempt from the
Math 18 requirement. Any student who feels he
should be exempt should obtain permission to
take the examination from Mrs. Oliver, Room
353 of Phillips, by January 8.
Shopping Center.
Navy Field. For more information,
Larry Schmdel, 933-4493.
Neics in brief
APO to sponsor
spring book co-op
Alpha Phi Omega (APO) service
fraternity will again sponsor the annual
book co-op during the beginning of the
spring semester.
The purpose for the co-op sale is to
allow students to sell their used
textbooks at prices they designate, with
10 percent of the profits going to the
APO scholarship program and Foreign
Student Emergency Fund.
Beginning on December 14 and 15 and
continuing from December 18 to 20, used
textbooks will be taken up by APO
fraternity members from 11:30 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. in the South Lounge meeting
room of the Student Union. At that time,
students will be given a receipt for their
books and a record of the prices that they
set on the books.
Sale of the textbooks will take place in
the Great Hall of the Student Union from
January 9 to 15, from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m.
Late textbooks will also be accepted for
sale on January 9 and 10.
Payment will begin on January 15,
possibly being handled through the mail
by check, according to fraternity member
Tom Seitz. In the event some textbooks
are not sold at the set prices, students
may return to pick them up within 30
days of the sale at the APO office in the
basement of Smith Hall.
In describing the annual program,
Seitz stated, "We're not buying the
books. They are on consignment only.
Only 10 percent of the profits will go to
the APO projects."
Seitz added that the textbook co-op is
a national service project of the APO
organization.
Tax time again
Students who consider Chapel Hill
their permanent home should list their
property for city and county taxes at the
Carrboro Town Hall between January 2
and January 30. Persons who are already
on the tax books will receive forms and
may list their taxes by mail for the first
time this year.
The tax books will probably be open
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday and from 8:30 a.m. until
noon on Saturday, according to Sam
Gattis, Orange County tax collector.
If taxes are not listed by the January
30 deadline, a late fee of 10 percent of
the total listing will be charged, Dave
Roberts, Chapel Hill tax collector, said.
If a student is registered to vote in
Orange County and if he considers it his
home, he should be compelled to list
taxes here, Roberts said. However, if a
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 a)"
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 "efore the next insertion.
rvfurray Pool
Beverly Lakeson .
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The Unique Boutique
An experience in velvet.
cotton, brass and wood.
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student is registered to vote in another
town and if his parents list his persor.i!
property with their own taxes, he is not
under obligation to list taxes in Chapel
Hill, the official explained.
Persons who listed taxes in Orar.ge
County last year must pay their tax bills
before January 1, to avoid a penalty.
Anyone who listed taxes in Orange
County last year and who has not
received a bill for his taxes should contact
the tax collector's office.
Library hours
The following is the Christmas holiday
schedule for the Wilson Library and the
Undergraduate Library, effective
Thursday, December 21 through
Wednesday, January 10:
The libraries will be closed from
Saturday, December 23 to Tuesday.
December 26; Sunday, December 31:
Monday, January l;and Sunday, January
7.
All weekdays the libraries are open,
their hours will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
On the Saturdays the libraries are
open, their hours will be 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
The libraries will be closed all Sundays
during the holiday.
Officials rebuked
Dean of Student Affairs Donald
Boulton, Physical Plant and the Campus
Police Department all came under fire
Tuesday night at the meeting of James
Residence College Senate.
Legislation was. "passed asking Dean
Boulton to approve a paint policy before
the end of the semester. The legislation
charged that "a policy allowing the
students to paint their rooms appears to
have no drawbacks that have not been
hurdled and the delay has apparently
been unwarranted."
A second bill reprimanded Physical
Plant for their failure to keep the parking
space lines painte4 and the police, for not
giving tickets and towing cars.
A third bill allocated S50 from the
academic budget to the Junior Service
League for their Christmas programs for
the underprivileged.
Freshman killed
Wade Archibald Taylor III of 1518
Granville West died in a two car accident
Friday enroute to his home in
Elizabethtown, N.C. Taylor was a
freshman at UNC.
Survivors are his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wade A. Taylor, Jr., of Elizabethtown.
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The finest medical care
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Everything carv be'provided for your
care, comfort and convenience by phone
by our understanding counselors.
Time is important.
Call toll free today.
A.I.C. Services 800-523-5300
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The Intimate
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Chapel Hill
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Located
upstairs next to
the Post Office on
Franklin Street.
175 E. Franklin St
Phone 929-9805