Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 6, 1973, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Daiiy Tar Heel Thursday, September 6. 1973 Discusses action for fall Jl open today Beginning today, new residents can register to vote without the normal 30-day residency requirement. According to election officials, in the 60 days before the election the requirement is thaFthe prospective voter will have been a resident for at least 30 days by the date of the general election. The city election is Nov. 7. Voter registration will -take place today at the Chapel Hill Municipal Building from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Persons wishing to file address changes can also appear before the registrars during the same hours. Deadline for new voter registration and filing of address changes for persons who are already registered in Orange County will be Oct. 8. Orange County handles both Chapel Hill and Carrboro city elections. The Municipal Building is located on North Columbia Street behind the fire station, about two blocks from downtown. New voters should bring some form of identification. Assistant deairi A black University executive has been named an assistant dean in the College of Arts and Sciences. H. Bently Renwick will leave his post as assistant director of undergraduate admissions to head undergraduate student contacts and relations as soon as a successor is found. Renwick will assume a primary f i t 1 I Liu In) nnn U MM rafmnr n 1 1 J WJ VtooaX' Vte' Free Cookbook Reference Library of over 200 carefully selected volumes Complete New York style Delicatessen meats, cheeses and salads o Fresh-baked French and Italian Breads daily Immediate parking directly in front of store in and out in minutes! Over 1000 imported and domestic gourmet foods One of the finest and widest wine selections in the Southl .- Tear Out This Ad And Put It In Your Purse Or On Your Bulletin Board So You Won't Forget! 942-8526 i i. V: D O O - rn tn m c I ALice? ?4- I capital J v2TJ- ( utou!) 157 n- -I , -r y l , i I, If 1 Thara will be welcoming tea for undergraduate and graduate Nursing students from 2 to 4 pjm. today in 104 Carrington Hall. The tea is sponsored by the Alpha Alpha chapter of the Sigma Theta Tau national honorary nursing fraternity. The Orange - County Association for Retarded Children will hold its first meeting of the school year at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 11, in Room D of the Institute of Government on the corner of Raleigh Rd. and Country Club Rd. in Chapel Hill. Are you interested in student organizations at UNC? Learn more about them at The Activities Mart- Talk with representatives from the different campus organizations 7 to 10 p.m. Sept. 6 in the Great Hall of the Carolina Union. All Attorney General staff members from last year are requested to contact the office in Suite C of the Carolina Union, 933-5663 or 933-5664 as soon as possible. Volunteers are needed for Birthchoice, a n o n - d e n o m i n a 1 1 o n a I , pro-life, pregnancy -counseling referal service. A general meeting and workshop will be held at 8 p.m.. Thursday, Sept. 6, at the Newman Center, 218 Pittsboro St. Workshops will include community resources, the psychological and named responsibility concerning minority student academic affairs, James R. Gaskin, dean of the college, said. Renwick joined the admissions office as assistant director in 1969 after serving as assistant principal, teacher and coach at Guy B. Phillips Junior High School here. o P : n u -L-aeire us jn3 And Only One Honest To Goodness In Chapel Hill Specializing in the finest imported and domestic foods, wines and specialties exclusively! IT IS nn Liu UULiUu Kroger Shopping Center Between University Mall Open 10-9 Mon.-Sat. 1-6 Sundays l'M NOT SURE I CAN , HANDLE 7HfXrQ$TONiMAAM B0NKfif you 5 Af PI COULP VISIT YOU SO YOU AT PZACT1CS, SO AZ, SAAYf WHO'S THIS 6CZ6SOUS CRATUR HOZS X AM.' AL1C! ANP HEZ7 xjQ fJfg Libnl -UJjUiI the legal aspects of abortion and discussions. Anyone interested is invited to come. - Register to vote tomorrow: 9 jri. noon, 1 p.m. 5 p.m.. Chapel Hill Municipal Building, North Columbia Street. There will be a meeting of the UNC Sailing Club at Tijuanna Fats tonight at 7:30, to plan a trip to Oriental, N.C. Anyone who needs a ride come by Room 202 in the Union. Applications are available for . students interested in working with the Attorney General's staff in Suite C of the Carolina Union Sept. 511. No preference will be given to race or sex. Persons interested in the YM-YWCA Big Brother-Big Sister Program ahould sign up for interviews this week in the Y office. Interviews will be held next week, Sept. 1014. Come and ahare your thoughts, feelings and questions about God. The Christian Science organization will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Carolina Union. Check . the schedule in the lobby for room number. Everyone is welcome. You are 'cordially invited to a UNC-CH Student Council of Exceptional Children get-together (students, faculty and staff). It will be held in Craige Dorm Basement Lounge on Sept. 9 from 7 p.m. until. Beer and wine served. Any sophomores on last year's Freshman Council interested in working with the Freshman Council this year please come to a meeting tonight at 7 in room 205 of the Carolina Union. Anyone else interested is welcome. Inter -Varsity Christian Fellowship presents piano-playing soulful-singing, guitar-picking Jim Ward at 8 p.m., Friday, Sept. 7 in Memorial Hall. The concert is free. ir and Eastgate WAT'S cm J FCZ6ST HIS MAMS.. MAY X OFFEfZ YOU A MA26A2JTA HOtiSY? AUC! THAT'S CUTOf LINE! -no IP n n rnnnp hp m r ? P f COULD I tM (a PINCH-miERlJ UWAA Mm plans agaim by Chertn Chewning Staff Writer Members of the University Women for Affirmative Action (UWAA) steering committee Tuesday night again attacked University officials for their slow compliance with the Affirmative Action Program (AAP). According to Barbara Schnorrenberg, APO: a fraternity geared to service The UNC chapter of Alpha Phi Omega (APO), a national service fraternity, combines fun and seriousness when it serves the University and Chapel Hill. While APO isn't a social fraternity, it's not all work and no play. And although the brothers don't have a house, they do have social rooms in the fraternity complex in the basement of Smith Building. Anyone interested in joining is invited to stop by Smith Building and get acquainted with the members. First semester freshmen are eligible for membership in APO. The of APO's best-known projects are the Campus Lost and Found, the Student Book Co-op and the annual Campus Chest. The Campus Lost and Found is in the basement of Smith Building. APO collects items weekly from all buildings on campus and catalogues them. Students $ i ' All ABC Permits Happy Hour 5-7:30 Proper Attira Raquird 4ll rllf TBI? FA i - liiriimi rir-"."." --fruiiminii Tifini-'hT 11 -Hi""J - -.....-....1tr. ... m.....1.IMWlMlW....,Jt,,ttm.Wit miitt.MMllMMl.lt j am..,. MmtU..lu al)ll(tllll)ltll iminaninniy. -.,.m,Mr, in iinii..T(..-i,M r-imni-n-ii rimt rr - "tin "T ninmj B OOK SALES M UWAA wrote Chancellor Ferebee Taylor on Aug. 7 and expressed disappointment that no action had been taken towards the appointment of the Affirmative Action officer and advisory committee. Schnorrenberg said Taylor has not responded to that letter. UWAA is eager to talk to representatives of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) may go by and pick up articles they have lost or call 933-3996. APO also sponsors the Student Book Co-op at the end of first semester. Usually students can get better prices at the Co-op than by buying or reselling books at the Student Stores. The Campus Chest in the spring consists of a series of activities to raise funds for local charities. The first event is an auction. Articles donated by Chapel Hill merchants, fraternities, sororities and celebrities are sold to the highest bidder. Next is the Ugly Man Contest. Each fraternity sponsors the ugliest man from its house. These then collect donations and the one with the highest total wins. The Campus Chest Carnival is the culmination of the money-raising events. Sororities and fraternities operate booths offering games and eats on the Ehringhaus Field one night in the spring. & t O" In Holiday Inn (At Eastgate) The Ultimate In Entertainment Open Monday Through Saturday 5-1 Live Entertainment And Dancing Nightly Ax i'tn sic iiikuiruc f( iuv nii IP f LOMMQM Hp - 1 ffft(i,. ftf (Old) arlMi - i'"w-'V -'OWfaw:-' ifJitttu fJJh-fi't EXPERIENCED YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO A PARTY IN THE CAROLINA UNION ROOM 207-209 THURSDA Y EVENING SEPTEMBER 6 AT 8:00 PM Free Refreshments Will Be Served concerning the University's slow compliance, Schnorrenberg said. "We are planning to contact HEW in Atlanta to see if and when they are coming to Chapel Hill," she said. In other business the committee discussed the possibility of establishing a state-wide University Women for Affirmative Action organization. Schnorrenberg said that women from NCSU and UNC-G have indicated an interest in forming this type of system. This year UWAA intends to give more attention to the problems of undergraduate women. The group plans to work with the Association of Women Students (AWS) in studying several areas including: Funds and facilities provided for women's athletics Athletic and academic scholarships offered to women students Discriminatory hiring practices against women in University facilities Lack of female role models (i.e. faculty members and advisers) available to women students UWAA will hold its first open meeting in late September or early October. According to Schnorrenberg, the group hopes to have Eliza Paschall of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission speak at that meeting. The group's summer activities, along with UWAA's recent critique of the AAP, will be discussed. Yack staffers Applications for Yackety-Yack staff positions of secretary and lay-out editor will be available in the Yack office from 7 - 9 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 6. The Yack office is in Suite D of the Union. Yacks will come out later in the month. This Week Appearing "White Horse" w - iiiiji EN J
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 6, 1973, edition 1
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