Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 4, 1974, edition 1 / Page 2
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5 The DaHy Tsr Heel Monday, Llarch 4, 1i74 Campus poll begins tonight A J m Ill3U,lUWllliS ILQJ U In by Crry Dsrssy Ctaff Writer Another consumer group plans to organize in Chapel Hill. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) will petition the campus tonight to see if interest warrants another consumer group. Chapel Hill's present consumer protection croup, the Student Consumer Action Union (SCAU), voted to support PIRG's efforts. PIRG is operating in several parts of North Carolina and SCAU thinks this will help broaden their resources. "SCAU can answer more of the consumer needs and expand our services to the community with the use of PIRG resources on other campuses, said SCAU chairperson sign W Sign-up procedures for 1974 fall residence hall space were announced last week by Housing Department officials. The pamphlet "Room to Live is not available to all students. The $50 prepayment for room space may be paid to the University Cashier anytime after receiving the pamphlet. The Housing Department advises students to make their payments or seek verification for financial aid as early as possible to avoid waiting lines at the Cashier's Office or the Housing Contract Office. The Housing Contract Office is now receiving applications from new freshmen, current residents who wish to apply for aldermen Members of the Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen have scheduled a light agenda for their weekly meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Municipal Building. Among the items that will be considered at the session will be a summary report by Director of Urban Development Kurt Henne on a recent public hearing in Raleigh concerning statewide sedimentation control. Town planners have been investigating erosion control as part of Chapel Hill's Long Range Development Plan. Other items slated for discussion are: Action on the Piedmont Electric power substation and transmission lines special use permit; Amendment of the Budget Ordinance to include changes in Recreation Department expenditures; Authorization to hire an additional planner for the Department of Urban D;eIopntent. " ' . .rrr,; ' t 3 ft I f. 1 1 ji it iiiiir MM LUfJCHEOFJ SPECIALS! 11:45-2:30 f.Ton.-Fri. EACH OWLY 11-17 1 Without Soup St Salad or $1.50 with. f.lon. Roast Beef Flatter, 2 vegetables, homemade soup, fresh salad, hot roils Tues. 14 CO Q Chicken, 2 vegetables, homemade soup, fresh salad, hot rolls Wed. Country Style Steak, 2 vegstabfes homemade soup, fresh salad, hot rolls Thurs. Craissd Beef Ribs homemade soup, fresh salad, hot rolls Fri. Hot Pastrami horoernada soup, fresh salad Fish FiHst homemade soup, fresh salad, hot roils Everyday Luncheon Special Shrimp Salad, homemada soup. fresh salad, hot rolls. Do sure to try Vssstarlsn Dinners Downstairs t the Bscchss 5:23-7:03, $1.25-$1.43t L!on.-Sst. ;xcxi:x:!I,c,::, i The Cal'y Tar Heat is published fey the University t North Carciina Student Publication Beard, My except Sunday, ciam periods, vacation, ami summer parted. No Sunday issue. The following d-etas sre to be the only Saturday issues: September 15, 22, A 29, October 2?, and November 10 ft 17. Of fists are at the Student Union building, Urthr. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C 27814. Telephone numbers: Kews, Sports 33-1011, 633-1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising 633-11 S3. Subscription raise: $15.00 per year; $3.00 per mstr. Sscorsd class posters paid at U.S. Post Office In Chapel HsSI, NX. Tha Campus Governing Council thaii have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate ail revenue derived from the Student Activiis Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution). The Dsl!y Tsr Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise or turn awsy copy It considers objectionable. Tha Cal'y Tar Heel wiii not consider adjustments or payments lor any typographical errors or erroneous Insertion unless notice Is given to the Business &ana;-ar within (1) one day after the advertisement appears, or within one dty of the receivng of tear shests or subscription of tha paper. The Daily Tar Me c-l will not be resoonsstWe for more than one irc Direct Insertion oi an advertisement scheduled to run severs! times. Notice for such correction must be c'ven before the next Insertion. 4 I t 4 4 4 4 4 $ I 4 4 4 4 I ft I v. fc'urrey Pool I v-cnaei Sehiftan.. Business sgr. Adver. f&gr. f j i M f J Janie Clark. "We will work with PIRG." Presently PIRG has groups working at Wake Forest, Saint Andrews, Duke and Davidson. They are trying to organize at Appalachian, UNC-G and N.C. State as well as here. This will be the second time PIRG has tried to organize here. The first time they were turned down by the Board of Governors and the second time by the Campus Governing Council. Reasons given for the past two failures include an opposition to a student fee increase. PIRG funding would have come out of student fees an increase of $ 1 .50 per student per semester. The Board of Governors rejected the -up begins another hail on campus as their first choice and off-campus non-freshmen who wish to apply for fall housing. Other sign-up procedures will occur on the following dates: March 26-29: Sign-up within the residence hall through March 29 or until the non-freshman quota is reached. After March 29 or when the quota is reached, current residents must file their applications with the Housing Contract Office. April 1-5: Residence directors (RD) will work with applications received from current residents and prepare rosters to be posted in each hall by 5 p.m. April 5. April 8-1 2: RD will work with freshmen applications. Rosters complete with current resident placement and with freshmen assignments will be turned into the Housing Contracts Office by 5 p.m. April 12. April 15: All applications from upper class students received on or after this date will be honored by date of receipt of application, with no priority given to on campus applicants. April 15: Housing Contract Office staff will begin assignment to remaining spaces. Sign-up within Craige Graduate Center will be held March 22-26. Current undergraduate residents in Craige may sign up in Craige or any other South Campus residence hall with in-building priority. Current graduate residents in Carr and Mcl ver may move to Craige with in-building priority. AFO caFinmva! sfigjia-up foe gaps Sign-up began Sunday for the 1974 Campus Chest carnival. Fraternities, sororities and dorms may pick up applications for booths in the Alpha Phi Omega headquarters in the basement of Smith building from 4-5 p.m. every day until Friday, Mar. 8. . Campus Chest, which is coordinated by APO, annually raises between $10,000. to $15,000 on campus, which it donates to various charities in Chapel Hill and Carrboro. APO will also be accepting ideas for the April 11 Campus Chest auction, Campus Chest chairman Blair Jerome announced. The carnival is scheduled for April 16. fff COUPLES CC?E IN AfD REClSTOt TO WIN A S2C3 C2A5E l BLCSSCM CIAnc;i3 We're giving away a magnificent Orange Blossom ring. AM you have to do is register. You need 1 not be present to win, and no purchase is necessary. Drawing to be held Satur day, April 27. 1974. Come in and register often. by ilfflWM ';.,, This ng is as unique as ycur love .... I As durable as your eternal devotion . . ' Only' could make such s ring Carlyle I . I &C0. I Ust Our Cevohrtng Charge or Your Ftvorif fUnb Crd j proposal' because the referendum would have allowed individual students to decide whether or not they wanted to support PI RG with their $1.50. lfthey didn't, they could get their money back. The board was afraid such a move would establish a precedent for other decisions on the mandatory student fees. CGC rejected the referendum the second time for the same reason. This year, if the group gets enough signautres on their petition, the referendum will still give students a chance to say whether or not they want their $ 1 .50 to go to PIRG or not. But they won't be able to get their money back. If a student votes against givintg $1.50 to PIRG the money will go into a miscellaneous CGC fund. If 50 per cent of the students don't want to support PIRG, the group will be automatically dissolved. In the past six months PIRG has been involved with several projects. They successfully opposed a phone rate hike by General Telephone Company in Durham and Monroe. They pressured supermarkets in Durham and Chapel Hill for lower food prices. They investigated consumer credit discrimination against women in Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill. Today's Activities Thar anil be an organizational meeting of tha Orange County CtSxans for Alternative Power to discuss acton on Duka Power and In support of the Braokside l&ners In Kartan Co., Kentucky, tonight at 7 p-m. In room 217 of tha Carolina Union. Tha meeting Is sponsored by Bread and Rosea. Gay Awareness Rap Group for gay man and women, 7 p.m. 218 Pfttsboro St. The UNC Football Club wffl begin light practice at 5:1 5 p.m. today on tha field behind the Administration Bunding. The UNC Elections Board will meet at 7 p.m. tn room 205 of the Union. . The UNC Parachute Club will hold a meeting for all persons Interested In taking spring classes, at 9 P-m. today In room 205 of the Union. All Instructors sre certified with the U.S. Parachute Association. Can 829-8837 for further Information. Coming Events There will ha a Cuban dinner, slide show and exhibition at tha Durham friends Meeting House, 404 Alexander Rd. (between East and West campuses of Duke University) Tuesday, March 5, from 8 to 7:30 p.m. Coat of tha meal la $1.75. The Philological Club wUI meet Tuesday, March 5, at 7:30 p.m. In tha Day Had Faculty Lounge. Professors Kenneth Reckford, Alfred Engstrom and Chrtstoph Schweitzer will lecture on "Iphlgenia'a Sacrifice: Four Interpretations (Euripides, Racine and Gob the)." v The Political Science Department at ECU la sponsoring a six-week European tour for $825. For hither details contact Dr. Hans K. Indort, P.O. Box 2752. ECU Political Slcnece CoiTiOUS 1 N CSIi'mvades by David Perimutt Special to the DTH Capitol Square in Raleigh will be engulfed this week by student lawmakers with high hopes of lending remedies to the social ills of the state. Acting as state senators and representatives, the student delegates will meet as a legislative body Wednesday through Sunday. Since its birth in 1937, the group has been recognized as the N.C. Student Legislature (NCSL), one of the oldest student law making bodies of its kind in the country. The entire delegation represents universities, colleges arid; community v . I m tt m CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE Sears 4.7 cu. ft Refrtg. Good condition. $130 new, $85.00 used. Austin Hea ley 3000 parts some MGB parts 957-1579. SKIERSn Fischer eilvergrase 195 CM 835. Brand new Sotamon 505 bindings sacrificed at $45. Nordica boots 10 used one season $25. 833-8728. Randy. Keep trying. GtTANE SUPER CORSA. ALL CAMPAGNOLO, TOOLS. FITTINGS. MECHANICALLY VERY GOOD, NEEDS PAINT. YOU DECIDE. CALL 829-8705 after B:00 PM Yamaha Endure DT3 For Sale. Stripped for Motorcrosa but have an street access. Many extraa. $800 or beat offer. Call 829-9037 for more details. STEREOS: GET THE MOST FOR YOUR MONEY FINEST EQUIPMENT LOWEST PRICES; FULL WARRANTIES; CALL ANN SHACHTMAN, 942-7172; VISIT, 1510, CUKEERLAND RD. CHECK RECEIVER SPECIALS LIMITED QUANTITIES! FOR RENT House to Rant In country has 3 bedrooms, dan ft complete kitchen. There la plenty of yard apace. May be reached at night at 9:00. 987-5532. Day Rueflen Seafood MkL Ask for Mr. Farrow. Needed Immediately: 1 or 2 femsie roommates. Apt in Carrboro. $37.50 month plus utilities. CaH 929-8S87 after 6 p.m. Wanted: Roommate beginning 311 In S-bedroom apt $8Smonth plus utilities. CaH Garry 7-10 p.m. St 942-8182. Need one or two welghtiifSera to help pay rant en gym In Carrboro. Excellent lifting equipment much better than Woollen's. $10 or lessmonth. 897-3438, 029-7232. WANTED ?7 ADOPTED?? Information needed from adoptive parents and adopted Individuals for exploratory research. Call 908-8398. Aak for Cindy Lindsay. WCHL la looking for a weekend air personality third class license required. Tom Taylor, 842-8755. An Equal Opportunity Employer. REAL E 3 TAT 2 SECRETARY: Exciting spot requires super kSis. fee paid. $SS0. LEGAL SECRETARY: Manage office tor busy attorneys. $09. RETAIL MANAGE LNT: Children's Wear $5239. Cat Pat Douglas or Janet Lea. 942-8521. SnaUing and 8 nailing. It's Clrl Scout cooMa time egsfn, it Icccl Girl Scouts sell them all over campus and ell over town. These Brownies olsndor 1 V. Dept. Greenville, N.C 27834, or call 758-6030. Prof. CH. Wang, University of Utah, win apeak on the "Study of Molecular Dynamics In Dense Fluids by Raman and Depolarized Rayleigh Scattering," Tuesday at 4 p.m. In 221 V enable Hail. Charles Vlckery, candidate for the N.C. Senate, win speak to all Interested people 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, room 217 of the Union. FREE BICYCLE REPAIR CLINIC, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at The Clean Machine Shop, 110 West Main SL, Carrboro. First of four weekly clinics, will stress repair and matntainence. v Buffet luncheon, 11:45-12:45 Tuesday at Battle House,. Items of Interest Competition for the Willie P. Mangum Medal in Oratory Is scheduled for March 5 at 8 p.m. In the Dialectic Hall, third floor New WesL Applications and details are available at the Union desk, Speech office and 105 Graham Memorial. Utilize the Student Escort Service. Call 933-7600 for escort Information. Call 933-5804 to volunteer assistance. Summer program In Mexico with tha Latin American Studies program of UNC-G, May 20 through June 28. For information, write Dr. Donald R. Mclrvin, Director of Latin American Studies, UNC-G, 27412. The Guidance and Testing Canter Is now open Monday evenings from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. In addition to Its weekday schedule of 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. CaH 933-2175 for an appointment or drop-in. Parsons Interested in assisting tha Rev. Charles W. Samuels in his campaign for tha Chatham County School Board contact Bin Brieger, 929-9170. aleisM tMs colleges throughout the state. The body's structure is based on the N.C. General Assembly's structure two senators from each school and number of representatives proportionate to the undergraduate population. Sixty per cent of the legislation passed by the NCSL in the past five years has been officially enacted by the N.C. General Assembly, Mitchell said. "When bills are passed by our committees, they are sent in final form with all the revisions to each state legislator," he said. "The legislators sometimes rewrite the bills, but the intent is not changed they seem to like what we're doing," Mitchell said. The UNC delegation of around 50 will be the largest representation in the 37 years of the NCSL's existence. Before their arrival in the capital city the delegates spent months preparing their legislative bUls. "The bills will be drawn up in final form," explains Mitchell, "and each delegation will have fully researched the entire 40 or 45 bills that will be proposed during the session by each school." Each delegation will have the opportunity to present a maximum of two bilk. UNCs delegation will present an energy proposal and a reform bill for the N.C. Department of Corrections. Ride wanted to Athens, Ga. or Atlanta for Spring Break. Call 933- 7072 wUI help with gas. Wanted: Males for a psychology expertmenL We pay monaytl Doflarstl Phone 933-2055, ask for Ann Houck and arrange a convenient time. We need people. Give us a cail. Masseuse (2) FuM or part time. Local Ladies Salon. Will train. Please call 942-8584 between 10-4. LIONEL TRAINS WANTED any type, condition. Dont let them waste away I 'if give them a good home. Bring them back after break cash paid. 987-1832. MISCELLANEOUS Confidential, Individual help for WEIGHT difficulties due to eating habits. Only those witling to WORK need apply. Call CODE 933-1722, leave number. Wouldn't It be nice to be In control of your own mouth? CONDOMS FOR MEN. Top-quality brands ALL at vary low prices. Dont settle for less than tha bast ADAM 8 EVE, Franklin 8 Columbia, (over CCE). For buying or selling sea our low prices on nice furniture 8 miscellaneous Items Good-As-New Furniture 40 1 W. Rosemary Hrs. 10-5 Tues-SaL WANT A DATE? Computer dating la back. Dont keap wasting your weekends. Let our computer match you lth your dream data. Our service covers over 50 collages In North Carolina. For comp-lete Information send name end ad dross to: STUDENT DATING SERVICE, Box 533, Carrboro, N.C. 27510. Missing: Black long-haired mala cat answering to name Okie it seen, please call Gail at 942-8331 or the Anlrusi Protection Society. Those interested In taking Persian Language for credit please contact GoH Irani at 829-2038 after 8 p.m. or Linguistics DepL In Dey HalL PRO LIFE PREGNANCY COUNSELING. BSRTHCHOICE. 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Monday-Friday. 842-3230. ABORTIONS. Safe-, tndiv. care; from $100 For appL dial eMuic direct at (202) 785-3531-3650 or (222) 833-3813-3814. D C. FAMILY MEDICAL CENTER, INC, 919 18ih St, N.W, Ste 121, Washington, D.C Across from Doctor's HospnaL Are you from a big city? Our Speech subgroup la studying regional dialects and would like to talk with you. Please call 957-7832 after 4.-0Q. Leaving town for spring break? Why worry While you're gone? Cail A.B. Security Inc. 829-0329. N.C License No. CP 120. Local company with experienced personnel. seem to be having take their picture Cellar Door solicits original student work by Art Elsenstadt Staff Writer ' Undergraduate authors, poets, playwrights and artists have been invited to submit original manuscripts to The Cellar Door, UNC's undergraduate literary magazine. Material will be accepted until this Friday, Mar. 8, in Box 22 in the Union, Cellar Door business manager Jon Hopkins said. Style sheets and lists of typing guidelines are available at the Union desk. Hopkins said the magazine "desperately needs poetry, prose, plays, drawings, artwork, graphics and almost any kind of innovative material." The Cellar Door will publish the selected manuscripts in its second issue, due to come out during the third week of April. Its first issue was published last fall and was sold for 35e per copy. "We felt that there was a need for undergraduate writers to get more exposure," Hopkins said. The Cellar Door wee r jt. The purpose of the energy bill will be to provide the state government with an agency to handle present and any future energy crisis. Eddie Hudson, co-chairman of the energy bill, said the bill is designed to regulate allocations of all energy resources during emergencies and proposes a long range plan for controlling energy consumption. "We researched two bills from California, two from New York, two from Oregon and one from Minnesota," Hudson said. The second bill constructed by the UNC delegation is a penal reform bill. The bill stresses the need for a continuing change in the state penal institutions from punishment to rehabilitation. The bill's major provision, Jon Childress, co-chairman of the penal reform act, said, lies in article four, in which an office of ombudsman is established. Gina Hudson, also co-chairman of the bill, said, "This office was set up so that inmates would have someone to voice their i grievances to." She said many inmates have I complained of being isolated from prison officials, and this office would lessen the gap. The ombudsman, Hudson said, "will not be under anybody's supervision the office's primary function is to listen to inmates problems arid refer them to other services." The ombudsman's office and staff will be separate from the Department of Corrections. "We felt that if the ombudsman was put in an objective position with no supervisors, but also with no authority to compel negotiations with officials the prisoners would feel freer to voice their problems," Hudson said. "iw., O Seafood O Steak O Chicken Only a 5-minute drive from downtown Chapel Hill. Beside Watts Motel on Pittsboro Road (old Family House location). Call Open every day but Sunday. Sample Menu Filet cf Flounder Tender Sweet Fried Clams Pan Fish in Season Seafood Platter-Delicious Assortment the Bounty of the Sea Shrimp Plattar-Golden Fried Largo Shrimp Piattar-Golden Fried Small Fried Oysters-large order Fried Oysters-small order Fried Sca'lop Platter Crab Cakes Saute Shrimp Above ordors served with our own Hush Puppies. French Fries and Cola Slaw r f ..3 i "a Qrszt tlms etching the photographer as they tit by Lenoir HsII. (Staff photo by Martha Stevens) has no connection with the Carolina Quarterly, which is composed chiefly of material written by graduate students. Cellar Door editor Lee Harris was one of the magazine's founders last spring, along with Vince Ropp, then a student at UNC, and Jim Cooper. Cooper served as prose editor before he resigned in February to run for Daily Tar Heel editor. St. Anthony Hall and the Dialectic and Philanthropic Society had also expressed interest in publishing an undergraduate literary magazine within their own organizations last year. Harris said the two organizations shifted their support to her group when the UNC Publications Board granted her funds for the project. "There is still a lot of individual interest in the magazine within those groups, but the organizations themselves would rather see it published on a University level," Harris said. There have been a number of short-lived undergraduate literary magazines campus in the past, the most recent being in the early 1950's. That venture eventually :evolved into the Carolina Quarterly. : ,i jJhe, Cellar,, Door gets.-approximately 25 per cent of its budget from the Publications Board. The remainder of its funds come from advertising, patrons and sales. Although the English Department is encouraged to send any exceptionally good works from its creative writing classes, most of the material used in the magazine is solicited on an individual basis. The Cellar Door is not meant to augment, nor to be merely an extension of the English department, Hopkins said. Harris said the fall issue was "very definitely a success." She added, "It is important that people continue to contribute to the magazine. If people realize that there is a place where they can contribute what they've written, we are successful." Two $50 prizes from the Jessie Rehder Memorial Fund will be awarded to the authors of what the Cellar Door staff select as the best work of prose and best work of fiction. Both of this year's magazines will be considered for the awards. Committee studies preferred treatment The Student Legal Assistance Committee is studying preferred treatment of customers by Chapel Hill service stations. The study is being done in connection with Attorney General Robert Morgan's suit against four Chapel Hill service stations. The committee wants written complaints from anyone who has been discriminated against in purchasing gas. Any student who feels he has been discriminated against should come by Suite C of the Student Union. Fish House I m. 929 - 9753. 'SI 'L French Fries Cole Staw Hush Puppies Tartar Sauce SERVED FAMILY STYLE I 1.95 2.75 1.95 of 3.50 1.S5 2. S3 1.S5 2.S5 1.S5 3.25 Open: Monday-Friday 11:30-9:30 Saturday 4 p.m. -9 p.m.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 4, 1974, edition 1
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