Friday. March 2. 1973 $l?iaUg (Star tfcri Campus news briefs Aid deadline now Marclu 9 The Daily Tar Heel Wild from the wires Compiled by Dean Gerdes " " Wire Editor Guorillas grab A group of Black September Palestinian guerillas occupied the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Khartoum Thursday, seized a group of diplomats including U.S. Ambassador Geo A. Noel as hostages and demanded the release of Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted assassin of Robert F. Kennedy. The French, British and Soviet ambassadors escaped in the initial confusion by climbing over a wail, the Sudan News Agency said. Reds break tense deadlock Communist officials broke a tense deadlock Thursday and announced that 136 American prisoners of war and six foreign captives would be set free Sunday in Hanoi. The sudden announcement came as U.S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers and 11 other foreign ministers including those of North Vietnam and the Viet Cong-initialed, a nine-point agreement in Paris providing guarantees for a lasting peace in Vietnam. Mitchell blasts hiring feminist Martha Mitchell said Thursday "I resent it like hell" that Jill Ruckelshaus, wife of President Nixon's environmental chief and an ardent Republican feminist, has joined the White House staff as a $50-a-day consultant. "I just resent this women's lib business," the wife of former Attorney General John N. Mitchell said in a telephone interview from their Manhattan apartment. State media want shield law There have been no problems yet, but North Carolina broadcasters and newspaper reporters would still like a newsmen's shield law to protect them from having to disclose confidential information or sources. That's what Wade H. Hargrove, attorney tor the North Carolina Association of Broadcasters, William Lassiter, attorney tor the North Carolina Press Association, and A. Howard White, the Chairman of the Press Association Legislative Committee, told a Senate Judiciary Committee in Raleigh Thursday. Funding cuts legal by Bill Shipman Staff Writer There may be no legal aid service for the poor in Chapel Hill after June 30. N.C. Legal Services, which gives-tegal aid i to nast. present and potential weltare recipients and deals mainly with domestic cases, may cease operation this June. The program, which began in Chapel Hill in January, 1971, was funded by HEW through the N.C. Department of Social - Services to demonstrate the possibility of a statewide legal aid service. The service may receive funds until Nov. 30," but that is the latest possible date, according to service coordinator Ken Broun.' The greatest sweep in the history of the New York Film Critics Awards HOURS 2-3:42-5:24 7:06-8:48 INGMAR BERGMAN'S CRIES AND Milton's Fabulous Frogstrangler ends tomorrow! Last chance to deal yourself savings that won't quit! Below cost deal on suits at $35.00 Long sleeve dress shirts & knits at . 4f $2.22, Half sleeve dress shirts $3.22; pants at $2.22! WHISPERS of United Press International U.S. diplomat may services by June 30 Government cutbacks will also eliminate the legal aid service in High. Point, N.C., which opened shortly after the Chapel Hill office. The High Point office has been much busier than the one ..,.,ia ,Ch.apel, H11H because Orange County bfTe'rsJaWerylimTfed clientele, Broun said. Service recipients must -meet certain guidelines concerning financial status and family. These guidelines eliminate most students that might otherwise use the service. Broun said that 90 per cent of the cases handled are domestic, involving divorces or child custody. Some consumer and landlord-tenant cases are also handled. The cutbacks are also jeopardizing legal OC? Q SS Q G?C?C? Sale, SALE sale, Sale! Four Sales! O USED PAPERBACKS at $.98 each in the Paperback Gallery! O USED PAPERBACKS from 2$.50 to 2$ 1 .50, downstairs, rear! NEW RECORDS, kids, folk, rock, jazz, classical $1.96 each! HARDCOVER BOOKS on lots of subjects at all prices, most reduced to less than half the original prices! Plus a fine art gallery, poster room, full-line paperback gallery, large department of children's books and full stock of current and favorite titles -r and a mob of the nicest customers you ever saw! Come browsing - 10 to 10 daily, 2 to 10 Sundays! 119 East Franklin Street in the heart of Chapel Hill A CA DEM Y AWARD NOMINA TONS Best Story Best Screenplay Best A chievement in A rt Direction A HOUSING ADVENTURE STORY! JUDITH CRIST. NBC-TV (Today Show) From COLUMBIA PICTURES A him by CARL FOREMAN ond RICHARD ATTENBOROUGH ROBERT SHAW ANNE BANCROFT ot lord Randolph Churchill ei lody Jennie .SIMON WARD YOUNG WINSTON f$ Riverview Theater 501 N. Roxboro Rd. Durham anUW MON thru FRI -SAT and SUN The deadline for applications for financial aid has been extended from March 1 to March 9, the Student Aid Office announced today. The deadline is effective for new applicants as well as currently enrolled students renewing their financial aid. Periods covered by such applications would be summer school, 1973, and the 1973-74 academic year. William M. Geer, director of Student Aid, said that applications received by the new deadline date will be given first priority. Those received after March 9 cannot be processed until all first priority applications are funded. Geer explained that the extension of the deadline by one week was made in hopes that all students who need financial Symposium What will it by Tad Stewart Staff Writer The Interim Committee of the Carolina Symposium will have a broad selection of topics to choose from Monday night when they decide the focus of the 1974 Carolina Symposium. Proposals ranging from women's liberation to the Orient have been submitted by students and professors. The selection committee, co-chaired by eliminate aid services in Durham, Winston-Salem and Charlotte. These offices are much larger than those in Chapel Hill and High Point, since they affect a larger urban population. Because they need not meet welfare guidelines, these services reach a much broader segment of the population, according to Broun. Broun said that any future legal aid services in North Carolina would not come from the federal government, but from other sources. The State Bar Association has explored the possibilities of a state program, but there is nothing definite planned. LATE SHOW FRI. 11:15 "200 f MOTELS' JSJUK 115 Riverview Special Theater Midnight 501 N. Roxboro Rd. Late Show Durham FRI. & SAT NITE ADULTS ONLY 99 IIMtS: PC 3 f v 8$m 7:00 - 9:30 2:00 4:25 7:00-9:30 aid will file their applications promptly. Noting the many uncertainties and threatened cutbacks in federal appropriations for 1973-74, he emphasized the importance of meeting the March 9 deadline. Press hearings Hearings scheduled this week before the U.S. ' Senate subcommittee on constitutional rights concerning a federal newsmen's shield law have been postponed until March 13-14. Sen. Sam Ervin, chairman, of the subcommittee, announced early this week that the confirmation hearings for Patrick Gray as head of the Federal Bureau of 74 O o Ken Richardson, Jim Henderson and Ellen Leach and consisting of 15 to 20 members, has been accepting ideas for the symposium since the beginning of the semester. Along with their ideas, students and professors have given a general outline of .how the topic could be. approached, according to Richardson. The committee will choose the topic it feels the "most students would be interested in and would be the most feasible," Richardson said. After the topic has been selected, the committee will choose a chairman. Applications are available to the entire student body. Interviews will be held the first week after spring break. When the chairman is elected, he will organize the symposium, choosing his own staff. It will take about a year, Richardson said, to assemble the symposium, which is tentatively scheduled for the third week in March, 1974. : The chairman first must raise the necessary funds. In the past, academic departments, the administration, various foundations, Student Government and the Union have contributed to the symposium. Some of the topics that the committee is considering are higher education, the Constitution, sports, Russia, mass communication, creativity, marriage and the family, and Cuba. Last year's topic was "The Mind of the South-the Southern Soul." The new love story from Eric cI(ohmer (ENGLISH SUBTITLES) R Selected to open the 10th New York Film Festival. Show Times: 1-3-5-7-9 Now Through Tuts. Life Magazine Says: "One of the few movies which genuinely deserve to be called GREAT." "TREASURE OF SIERRA MA PRE" Starring: Humphrey Bogart Late Show Sat Night 11:15 be? i v " i Investigation would be called for Wednesday and Thursday by Sen. James Eastland, chairman of the Judiciary Committee. Thus, no hearings could be held by the subcommittee while the full committee was in session. DTH Editor Evans Witt was scheduled to testify at the hearings Thursday. He is now scheduled to appear March 13 before the subcommittee to discuss the rights of college and underground newspapers. Professor dies Internationally known professor Ethel Nash died here Wednesday at the age of 63. A famed author and consultant in marriage and family counseling, she was the wife of Dr. Arnold Nash. Prof. Nash was an associate professor in the UNC Medical School, senior research associate at the Carolina Population Center and an associate at the Institute for Research in Social Science. Workshop topic "Freedom of the Press" will be the topic of an American Women's Workshop panel at 8 p.m. Monday at the home of Mrs. Burton Levy, 2014 Tadley Drive. Campus Today's activities Don't forget the buffet dinner at the Wesley Foundation at 6 p.m. Entertainment will feature the Wesley Quiz Bowl Team after dinner. Professor N.U. Prabhu of Cornell University will speak on "Weiner-Hopf Factorization for Markov Semigroups" at 4 p.m. in Phillips 265. Refreshments will be served at 3:30 p.m. in Phillips 277. There will be a Chemistry seminar by Or. James Orrell at 7 p.m. in room 268 Venable on "Biophysical Properties of the Molecular Interactions between Halides and Rare Earths." All interested people are invited to come. Coming activities Kay Fitts, a member of the Medical Committee on Human Rights China tour in 1972, will speak and show slides on "Health Care in the People's Republic of China" from 3:30-5 p.m.' Monday, March 5, in the Public Health Auditorium. ; ' - , ' , ' . ' ' . . ' . . The duke Gay AllianceOrion will meet at 7 pjrn. Sunday. March 4, in the Baptist Student Center on Alexander Avenue, Durham. All gay sisters and brothers are welcome. Dr. James W. Baker will speak on "Kinectic Inductance in Thin Superconducting Amorphous Bi Films" at 4 p.m. Monday, March 5 in room 233 Phillips. The speech is sponsored by the Solid State Seminar. James Wright, Pulitzer Prize winning poet. 7T IN THE LIFE AND TIMES OF A National General Pictures Release VS4 HELD OVER SHOWS 2:30-4:40-7:00-9:15 TlF0SHS!iS Vincent Canty. New York Times ft ' Ti ii r - - '- - -' Pak.jr.ar Pictures Irt'jmatjor Neil Simon's M13 ' An Elaine May Film jPGj-S- pp:tsetdeujxe- ee y's. --, M 1 1 54m- j eMM it - v ' John B. Adams, dean of the School of Journalism, will lead the discussion. The public is invited. The workshop is an interracial, inter-faith group working to overcome prejudice. ;j India series set The India Association of UNC has recently initiated an India Discussion Series to examine contemporary problems common to India and North America. The series meets at 2 p.m. every Saturday in room 202 of the Union. Dr. Naren Tambe, professor of education at N.C. Central University, will examine "Education in India and the U.S. Plight of the Underprivileged and Disadvantaged" this week. A Medical The Medical Law and Ethics Lecture Series, an annual colloquium sponsored by the Whitehead Medical Society, will be held weekly from March 7 through April 11. The lectures will begin at 7:30 p.m. every Wednesday '' in the Clinic Auditorium of Memorial Hospital. Lectures are open to the public. - i ub. will speak at Duke University at 8 p.m. in the Gross Chemical Laboratory Tuesday, MarO 6. He is sponsored as a parffbf the William M. Blackburn Literary Festival. The 11 a.m. worship 'service at the Wesley Foundation Sunday, March 4, will include a sermon by Dave Treat, Duke Divinity School intern here at Wesley. Dr. Carl- Harris 6ft George Washington University will speak on "Statistical Analysis of Queueing Systems" at 4 p.m. Thursday, March 8, in 265 Phillips. Coffee and tea will be served at 3:30 p.m. in 277 PhHlips. The coed UNC Frisbee Team will practice the intercollegiate game of the Ultimate Frisbee at 4 p.m. Sunday, March 4, on the Astroturf. For information and rulebooks contact Larry Schindel at 933-4498. Durham Savoyards announce tryouts for their production of "Yeoman of the Guard" to be held 1:30-5 p.m. March 4, at the Allied Arts Center, 810 Proctor Street, Durham. Newcomers are welcome, to- -audition. Show dates are May. 18-20, 25, 26 In Page Auditorium, Duke. All persons interested in working during International Week, April 8-15, should contact Anthony Stewart at 929-6615 or Sheela Sehorn at 933-6205. CURTIS a uaYfield ' vi 1c , OPEN TICKET SALES fiw Carolina Union Information Desk J it. 9 a.m. to'7 p.m. Mon-FrP CONCERT IN CARMICHAEL March 4 5iW $2.00 Th. City Tar Hei H pubtftfied by W University of North CaroBna Student -uoacaon Board, dairy except Sunday. "'? no summer is. I YrVSZ- at the Student Union ; feuHdln unhr. of North Carolna, Chapel Min, NX. 27514. Telephone numtMrs, New Sports' 933-1 01 Is 2I?li.12; ". Clrcutartion, AdvertHint 833-1163, , f?,ptlofl r,t 10.0 per year; 5.00 per semester. I li n Second cim postaoe paid at U.S Poet Office in ChapeiHINX. The Student Legislature shall have l fmtn the student r2T JZUTJ Wopriate an revenue ied frorn.,tho Student 7??'" the rtgm to xoverDsements and to : revise or turn away copy It considers o&JectlonahHu IuimtJV- consider adjustments or peymerrts for em advertisement Involving m,? typographical errors or erroneous' rtion unless notKe isivW Businw Manager with ! ttjr the advertisement Z within one day of the reMftVof tear fLJfTU? 001 sponsible in 12122? Cortect insertion of an advertisement scheduled t Calenaar periods. No Sunday feu. The following ft to be the onrjrSaturday luuess rpUm.l2r " 23. October 14 i 24, and November 11 A 18. ii2IN,C ,0 correction I i t ) h hi V 1 1 NOW SHOWING SHOWS 3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15 Murray Pool Business Mor Floyd Alford. Jr. iflM NOW PLAYING t 5 U it

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