The Daily Tar Heel Friday. January 19. 1973 Campus news Ejkriiiigli Attention ' candidates lor campus office; Ehringhaus Residence College passed a resolution Wednesday concerning campaign posters and stickers. Candidates, not adhering to the new policy could find their publicity excluded from Ehringhaus dorm. According to the resolution, only two posters per candidate are allowed per floor. Both posters must be placed in the lobby area in the general vicinity of the bulletin boards. Violation of the resolution will result in all of that particular candidate's posters being withdrawn from the floor and the privilege of posting further campaign material revoked. All posters in excess of two placed prior to publication of this resolution will be withdrawn with no penalty ' ' Also, any violation by a candidate would be publicized as comprehensively as possible, showing that candidate's lack of concern for the wishes of his or her constituents ": The resolution, according to its authors, is not intended to slight or favor any candidate but to insure equality of exposure to all candidates regardless of campaign funding. Ehringhaus. urged other residence colleges to pass similar resolutions.- Vending vandals Triangle Coin Caterers has lost over $10,000 in the past two months in the machines it operates on campus due to Public policy seminars scheduled American politics, women's liberation and narcotics addiction are among the topics at a series of Colloquia to be held at Duke University during the next four weeks. -On Monday, Jan. 22, Dr. Aaron Wildavsky of the University of California at Berkeley will speak on "Bureaucratization of the Presidency and Dfi-Bu.rea(u,.pratiza'tion of the Bureaucracy.' Dr. Wildavsky is dean of the Graduate School of Public Policy and Professor of Political Science at Berkeley. In addition, he is a noted analyst of the role of public policymaking in American politics and has written a number of books on the subject. The colloquium will be held in room 226 of Duke's Perkins Library. The American judicial system will be the focus of a talk by Dr. John McConahay on Thursday, Jan. 25. McConahay, an assistant professor of -political science and psychology at Yale Jonathan Livingston Seagull No. 1 BEST SELLER NOW IN PAPERBACK AT THE LITTLE PROFESSOR BOOK CENTER UNIVERSITY SQUARE 143 WEST FRANKLIN MON.-TUES.-SAT. 10-6 WED.THURS.-FRI. 10-9 SUNDAY 11-1 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 9331011; 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 ceserves 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 roust be given "jefore the next insertion. Murray Pool ... . Floyd Alford, Jr. Business Mgr. . Adver. Mgr. briefs vandalism. This company cannot sustain this loss and continue to operate on campus. The loss of the service would mean the loss of $60,000 annually contributed to the student scholarship fund. John Temple, Assistant to the Chancellor on Business, has issued a request to all members of the campus to report to campus police immediately any people tampering w'ith coin-operated machines and to make sure doors lock after them when leaving buildings in the evening. Big Brothers Today is the last day to sign up for Big Brother interviews- Appointment sheets are. available in -the YMCA office on campus. Interviews will be held next week. . , . Big Brothers donate their time to work and play with youngsters for whom such companionship would otherwise be lacking. Bicycle toiving? Any bicycles found in an unauthorized area in a residence hall after Monday, Jan. 22, will be removed and stored in the car compound at the Physical Plant. The action is being taken because bicycles blocking exits are considered fire hazards, according to Russ Perry," coMoOTiia University, will speak on "Severity of Crime and Jurors: The Attrition of Responsibility," at 3 p.m. in room 139 of the Duke Social Science Building. McConahay, who holds an undergraduate degree in engineering and divinity and a Ph.D. in psychology, is co-author of "The Politics of Violence," scheduled for publication soon. Betty , Frjedan, feminist leader and author of "The Feminine Mystique," will ? deliver an address in Page Auditorium on Friday, Jan. 26. The topic of the speech, scheduled for 4 p.m., is "The Sex-Role Revolution." Richard Daley and his city, will be the subject. of the last January colloquium," a BREAD AND ROSES PROUDLY GRE AT COMEDIANS OF THE 50's LENNY BRUCE" A FULL HOUR SHOW. LENNY BRUCE, THE COMEDIAN WHO OPENED THE WAY FOR TODAY'S COMEDIANS. IS SEEN IN THIS FILM IN A COMPLETE, LIVE ON STAGE, PERFORMANCE. THE ACT ENTAILS MANY OF THE BITS THAT LENNY WAS ARRESTED FOR EARLIER IN'HIS CAREER AND IS THE LAST FILM RECORD OF HIM BEFORE HIS TRAGIC - DEATH IN 1966. SID CAESAR A; PAIR OF SHORTS FROM THE AWARD-WINNING "YOUR SHOW OF SHOWS" TV SERIES, STARRING THE PERSON WHOM ESQUIRE (MAY, 1972) CALLED "THE FUNNIEST MAN IN AMERICA." THE FIRST OF THE SHORTS WAS WRITTEN BY THE ONE AND ONLY.WOODY ALLEN WHEN HE WAS ONLY IN HIS EARLY TWENTIES. . - THE HOUSE UN-AMERICAN ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE MUCH AS THE FAMOUS "REEFER MADNESS" WAS SHOWN TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY IN THE LATE 1930'S, SO WAS THE RED-BAITING "OPERATION ABOLITION" SHOWN TO MILLIONS OF GULLIBLE YOUNG MINDS BETWEEN 1960 AND 1964. THE DISTORTIONS OF THIS NOTORIOUS MOVIE WERE SO NUMEROUS THAT THE A.C.L.U. WAS FORCED TO ISSUE A MOVIE ON ITS OWN' ENTITLED "OPERATION CORRECTION," TO DEAL ADEQUATELY WITH ALL OF THEM . FRI., SAT., SUN., JAN. 19-20-21 ; CARROLL HALL - (fyftiiiiiriaffA zz V U U U U vi Cf VJ U .,,.4!,:. assistant director of operations for residence life. To pay for the cost of hauling and storage, a fee of $5 will be assessed when the bicycle is claimed. Bicycles are permitted in dorm rooms only. They are not to be left in halls, stair wells, outside halls in high rise buildings, lobbies, porches, common areas or any other place inside a residence hall. War protester Michael Allen, one of four Americans who spent Christmas in Hanoi, will speak at UNC on Monday, Jan. 22, at 8 p.m. in Hill Hall. Black service frat organizing at UNC Ten black UNC students have recently organized the Lampados Club, a pledge affiliate of the national black service fraternity Omega Psi Phi, in the hopes of becoming the first predominantly black fraternity on the UNC campus. According to Charles Harris, secretary of the club, their organization will soon achieve chapter status with the issuance of a charter from the national headquarters next month. "The Way to Run a City?" scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 30. James Hoge, editor of The Chicago Sun-Times and Richard Wade, Distinguished Professor of History at City University in New York, will head the colloquium. The meeting is scheduled for 4 p.m. in 226 Perkins. On Wednesday, Feb. 7, the treatment of narcotics addiction will be the subject of a colloquium, to be held in the Duke Medical School Amphitheatre Div Peter , Bourne of the Special: Action Office for Drug Abuse Prevention and Graham Finney, former commissioner of New York City's Addiction Services Agency, will discuss the topic "Methadone as Treatment for Drug Abuse." SALUTES . i - : 7:30 & 9:40 - $1.00 Allen's speech is being sponsored by two campus chaplains, the director of the campus YM-YWCA and the rector of the Chapel of the Cross. Allen, an Episcopal clergyman, is associate dean of Yale Divinity School. For ten years he directed an Episcopal ministry in New York City's Bowery. He has been active for some years in the anti-war movement. Telford Taylor, Joan Baez, and Gary Romo accompanied Allen on the trip to Southeast Asia. Taylor, who was prosecutor in the Nuremburg trials, teaches at Columbia University. Baez is a well-known folk singer and peace activist. Romo is a member of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. Harris believes that there has been a definite need among UNC's black students for a predominantly black fraternity on campus. "Personally, I don't know too many black students that will join a white social fraternity. Several of us felt that there was a need for a fraternity on campus that would help with black identity. The Omega Psi Phi organization was the third black fraternal club to be organized nationwide and was founded in 1911 at Howard University. It stresses brotherhood and community service among its members as its primary goals. Locally, the Lampados club accompanied students from the Sarah Barkham School for the Retarded in Durham on a trip to the Morehead Planetarium as their major Christmas service project. Future plans include a service auction to be held Jan. 25 in the Pit and a series of car washes slated for later this semester. The club is now meeting under the leadership of President Eric Dean in the Craige Graduate Center. Induction of new pledges will take place after the spring : semester break. X THINK- THIS RfiN. SAOil )NP SL5ZT 8U&N5SS IS FMAiy 6 err a g to m HZ. X MNT ' our m GO 00 c J3 fKYJXli'- ( THAr5 THE PAST ) ' UHAT 00 wu TRROb) I M KtuSnf) V I LIKE y POWrWTHE tT-XTH V WURKEAP? RP-STOPfT? J I BIRD'S... I oi - : 1 1 i y. r ni" . i u O HI m r I I Cainnroiuis Today's activities If you are driving to Washington on Saturday for the Counter-Inaugural and have extra space in your car or if you need a ride,, come to the Pit at noon today. Someone will be there coordinating rides. Coming activities On Tuesday, Jan. 23. a meeting will be held for persons interested In a task group to seek means by which the oppressed people in our society and community can be helped. The meeting win begin at 8 p.m. in the upper lounge of the Wesley Foundation, located on 214 Pittsboro behind the Carolina Inn. The seminar group of the Freshman Council will meet Tuesday. Jan. 23, at 7 p.m. in Suite C of the Union. The Student National Education Association (S.N.E-A.) is meeting Monday, Jan. 22, at 7:30 p.m. in 08 Peabody Hall. Dr. Norton Beach, dean of the School of Education, will be the guest speaker. His topic concerns teacher certification. Meeting is open to the public Scripture course being offered on the Psalm's beginning Sunday, Jan. 21, at 1 p.m. Roland Murphy from the. Duke Divinity School will conduct the course. Free. Newman Center, 218 Pittsboro. An inauguration of Conscience Convocation is being held at 8 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church. 305 E. Main SU Durham on Sunday. All are welcome. The Sunday (Jan. 21) Service of Worship at the Wesley Foundation will be a service of remembrance for Martin Luther King, Jr. The sermon will be given by Robert Johnson, Methodist Chaplain. Service begins at 11 a.m. The Department of Statistics colloquium will feature Colin L. Mallows on the topic "Robust Regression" at 4 p.m. Monday, Jan. 22, in Phillips 265. If you hate to keep silent at the time of Nixon's inauguration but can't go to Washington, there's an alternative. On Saturday, Jan. 20, at noon in the Pit there will be a gathering of concerned individuals. A' student leader, a Vietnamese student, a veteran and a campus chaplain will speak. A silent peace vigil in front of Woollen Gym will follow. Chess Tournament Saturday, Jan. 20, in rooms 207-209 of the Union. Registration ends at 10 a.m., first round begins at 10:30. All participants will play three rounds. U5. Chess Federation membership is required and can be obtained at the tournament. The entry fee is $3. The UNC Frisbee Team will be practicing the coed sport of Ultimate Frisbee Sunday at 4 p.m. on the Astroturf. Everyone is invited to play. For rulebooks and information contact Larry Schindel, 933-4498. The Israeli Yad Vashem exhibit on the Holocaust in Nazi Germany will be on display in the North Gallery of the Student Union, Sunday, Jan. 21, through Saturday, Jan. 27. LEST WE FORGET. ...... Items of interest Skydiving? The UNC Sport Parachute Club will hold its first class of the semester on Feb. 1, 2 and 3. First jump to be made on Feb. 3, weather permitting. For information call 933-4231. Mrs. Sylvia Crofton, a Christian Science r nnrJ'-r efJfth) HDUi POSTMEN CflN PO AT LBftSl X HfiVZN'T Mer UP WITH ANY pmoaous poes! ue ITN&&INT PUPUC SERVANTS ARE TFRPJ- Piep of pooch est round, x ve ONLY 8BSN ftT IT ON 5 weex Anp x'm EtHfivsr&P.' 0 TTrt A CaleEftdlair J Campus Counselor, has postponed her hours to Thursday. Jan. 24, at 8:30 in the Union. She will answer questions about Christian healing. The Blue Sky Party returns come to the National Convention. Participate in democracy at the Town Hall. Monday. Jan. 22. at 8 p.m. All your favorite promises, including new improved lies, the Blue Sky Choir, mus provided by the IncrediOte Dixieland Band, free admission, see Sage do his famous Frisbee catching trick. Meet Sam the Artichoke in person. Counter-inaugural People driving to Washington in cars are advised to parte anywhere possible and catch a bus or cab to trie demonstration. There will be no specific parking areas, but most of the city will be open. For more information, see Rennte Davis at Duke at 8:15 in the Gross Chemistry Auditorium or contact Washington Witness. Union Social Committee (includes Deep Jonah staff) needs new members for spring. Sign up for interviews at Union desk Jan. 18-26. In preparation for the Campus Chest Drive it will be necessary that any charity that wishes to apply for funds submit an application by Jan. 20 to Campus Chest, co Alpha Phi Omega, Smith Building. UNC. Chapel Hill. Candidates for off-campus AWS representatives must file for the Feb. 6 election by Monday, Jan. 22, with Leo Gordon. Miller Analogies and Test: 022 Peabody Hall until Feb. 1. 8-3:30. Monday through Friday. $7. The Guidance and Testing Center is moving Feb. 5. Come before Feb. 1 or wait until after Feb. 15, then come to Nash Hall, second floor. AWS is planning to charter a bus to the North Carolina Women's Political Caucus in Raleigh on Saturday, Jan. 27. if enough people are interested in attending. Betty Friedan will be the featured speaker and the registration fee is $2.50, which includes lunch. Please sign sheet ' outside the AWS office in the Union by Monday, Jan. 22. The Modern Dance Group will hold its first dance session Monday. Jan. 22 at 4:30 p.m. in the dance studio at Women's Gym. All interested persons are invited to join us. Wanted: One room that will accommodate 75 people at 11 a.m. on MWF in exchange for a classroom that holds SO people. Please contact the Religion Department. Colloquy on summer jobs: Don't let early' deadlines eliminate you from a summer job opportunity. Sign up in 211 Gardner, to attend one of the meetings scheduled for the weeks of Jan. 22 and 29. These are sponsored by the Placement Service for UNC students who have not yet registered and are seeking employment for next summer. r Required meeting for all those Interested in tutoring through the YM-YWCA on Thursday Jan. 25, at 7:30 in 08 Peabody. The Thursday Experience of Worship , resumes at Battle House Thursday at 6:30 p.m. The return of the Battle House Buffet highlights spring plans of the Baptist Campus Ministry. Buffet will operate on Tuesdays from 11:45 to 12:45 beginning Jan. 23. Cost is one ' dollar. Attention foreign students: If you are not a citizen of the U.S., January is the month when you must report your address to the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Address forms may be obtained at local post offices. safe f

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