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Friday, March 23, 1874 Ancient art of acupuncture ..Qi'Wminii f! ; - f 5 7 v 1 1 it The Daily Tar Heel i ''4 by CtcIIa f.!orcc:n Ctsf! Writar lt is possible to speak of acupuncture now in the United States because Henry Kissinger has been to China, Dr. Frederick F. Kao said Wednesday night in a speech on acupuncture. . His appearance in Memorial Hail was sponsored by the Carolina Symposium on East Asia. A native of Peking, China and a professor of physiology at the Downstatc Medical Center, State University of New York in Brooklyn, Kao is a nationally prominent mmer housing plans Summer and extension housing information and applications are now available in pamphlets being distributed by the Housing Department. For the summer session, undergraduate women will be housed in Spencer, Mclver, Kenan and Alderman dorms. Undergraduate men will be housed in Aycock, Graham, Lewis and Everett. Craige Graduate Center will be available for graduate and professional students. Coed housing will be offered on a floor by floor arrangement in Alderman and Lewis dorms, as long as there is space. 40f - i WA W N W Tryouts for UNC cheerleaders will be held at 6:30 p.m. Monday in Carmichael Auditorium. The UNC cheerleading squad needs six men and six women. First cut will be Wednesday, final cut will he Thursday. Tryout for head cheerleader will be 7 p.m. Wednesday in Carmichael. fV te,) iaa L j" . . i V-jii Lain I al kJ z8" f" "OsV CAMPUS'' Th Daiiy Tar Hub! I ptiBhl by tha University of Nonn Carolina Sfwdsnt PubllcaUoA Board, aally ticept Sunday, axam partoda, vacation, and summer period. Wo Sunday tewa. Tha loilowlnj SaS ar to ba tba only Ssteday issuaa: 8ptambar 15, 22, a 23, Oetobar 2T, and Noaambar 1,0 A 17, ' Cf!lc rt at tha Student Union buHdlnfl, UnW.ot North Carotina, Chapal Hilt, N.C. 2T514.Taiphona numbart: Kawa. Sport 33-1011, 823-1012; Buinat, Circulation, AdvarUaing 833-1183. Sabscd-pKon rataa: $18.09 par yaar; $8.00 par aamaalar. $ ;5,i 3 c pc.: r' at U.S. Poat Oftloa In C H 1, N.C. t sC.-i' C m rft-' r 3 C jc;5 s'i4 s8a powa t, c.-'tr'-' tr ijt Acttvttiaa faa and to e 4 6 ! rtvartoa Ct.ti tsont ta Ciudant A r.a (1.1.1.4 ct t..a ttjXjrt Corit':tton). T' a C. Tr ,:.( h-ss Bta f;M to rtjuSfilt tha t ; - Cil toi-a (4 nil 2'a-u.nlt and to " a or Un a r y er y H contUSara ot; actlonabta. I f; i r ' f it H-'ri I nctconaldar adJuatmaBtoor if jra"y t) ? ; ' iC.a arrora orarroiwou tt -i r U s to tta Bualnaaa r, .(craifayansrttiaftdwiaamairt , a . n era C -y ot tha of taar i Cr t . ', n l i t p:r. Tha Dally Tr i i r, i ta r -ii. ' lor mora Bian ona E '' i c.-t :t ! Uan wtmaUwrBamaraataauiaaio ,i i it,-- ! t - -n. lofc far eh eorraetl on aut tr i ! ,i t' i fsxt IriarUon. sy P. 1 . J i. i : Umt. t-jr. TTDriTTTl if 11 specialist on acupuncture. According to Chinese theory, acupuncture is based on the flow of chi or "life energy through the body. Chi is "controlled by yin and yang, the Taoist concept of universal opposites existing in nature. Taoists consider disease the result of an imbalance of yin and yang that disrupts the orderly flow of chi through the body. The theory also divides the major body organs between yin and yang. Life energy is said to flor from organ to organ through a network of channels beneath the skin called meridians. The men's and coed residence hall summer rate is $86 per session. The women's residence rate is $102. Summer housing is restricted to registered students. Full payment must accompany application-contracts and roommate preference will be honored only with simultaneous submission. Applications will be honored in order of submission. Meal plans are also available. For the summer session, residence halls will open at noon. May 19 and June 30. They will close at 6 p.m., June 25 and Aug. 6, except to interim students. ' Staff photo by Martha Stevens Joni Blackbird breaks for ice cream I I NOW PLAYING - SHOWS AT: 2:45 7:15 5:00 9:3o Truffaut's DAY FOR (MIGHT Starring Jacqueline Bisset Rated PG . NOV PLAYING SHOWS: 3:00 5:05 7:10 9:15 JOU VCIt23"37 PANAVISION r N COLOR BY DELUXE jj .Jj 6th DEMONIC WEEK SHOWS AT: 2:00-4:30 7:00-9:30 rJominatcd for 10 Academy Awards including Best Picture f !o From V.'irrTcr Eros. I ) V f f r" J I w f C There are specific points arrayed along these meridians which doctors practicing acupuncture learn to pierce to correct imbalances in the flow of energy. Kao said acupuncture is not a new concept. There is evidence of its practice over 5,000 years ago. He said the popularity of the art re-emerged in 1949 as a result of the new Chinese government. Kao explained the dichotomies between Western medicine and Oriental medicine: "Western medicine is practiced according to where the trouble is. The Chinese practice the opposite. We treat the body as one organism." released Summer extension housing will be available in Cobb dorm for visitors participating in special University sponsored programs. Individuals desiring space must present a letter from their adviser, department or library stating that the person is known to University agencies and is present to use University facilities. Roommate requests must be filed simultaneously. Cobb will be available from May 13 through Aug. 16. The rates for a five to seven-day stay are $23 for a single room and $17 for a double. For a single night stay, the rates are $4 for a single and $3 for a double. Linen is provided, and there is a special high school student rate of $12.50 for a week's stay. Staff will be available in Cobb to check people in from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. each day. Full payment must accompany the contract, and extensions of stay will be given if there is space. Electric rates . rise 5 per cent You may not have known it, but your monthly electric bill Wednesday increased by five per cent. The increase, passed on to consumers by the North Carolina Utilities Commission after Duke power raised its wholesale electric rates, has already taken effect and will appear on monthly bills in the form of a surcharge. An increase in the cost of coal was cited by power companies as the reason for price hikes. The state commission ruled that the new increase will not benefit the University Service Plants through additional profits. r IQIalllJATED IrO Mr' !f f tmm-Xf-VitaT I e'taBatW taV W elaaflttaJ J Ls 11-w.n&v!n j u.'&rr.n o,TCf Z1L K CHIL 1:50 4:10, 6:30 8:50 aura tzu Meat 4 lXSJ.- .: , i.V zJA: uiWJf4J 'rF -A Poollo ace POCCG.PODPOG LOOGd u LiBO L Li H cO tS) Kao emphasized that acupuncture is not a panacea a cure for everything. "It is only the tip of the iceberg of Chinese medicine," he said. "There is much more to offer." Kao supplemented his talk with a slide show. He showed pictures of needles used in the treatment, some of which were over 4,000 years old and ranged in length from half an inch to several inches. Other slides were of patients treated with acupuncture to relieve pain during operations. Kao said many patients are able to sit up immediately following operations and to . walk back to their rooms. The long period in the recovery room that is part of Western medicine is eliminated. Kao explained the vast possibilities of acupuncture in the treatment of illnesses. "It has been used to treat glaucoma, arthritis and deafness," he said. "It is being tried in the treatment of retardation. There has been evidence of its success in treating schizophrenia when used in conjunction with other treatments. Kao was optimistic about the future of acupuncture for treating disease and relieving pain. But he anticipated problems in getting people accustomed to a concept that is new to them. He explained the typical American approach to medicine: "We don't know if it's good or not. We're so conditioned to drugs that we think they work. We don't think about the mechanism." Richards takes by Jin? Roberta Staff Writer Jeff Richards, fiction editor of the Carolina Quarterly, was approved by the Publication Board Thursday as editor of the Quarterly for the 1974-75 editions. Richards had recommendations from" Prof. Kimball King of the English Department as well as Bruce Firestone, editor of the 1973-74 Quarterly. "Good Former .ambassador to speak Dr. Edwin O. Reischauer, regarded by many as the country's foremost expert on the Far East, will speak tonight at 8 in Memorial Hall as part of the Carolina Symposium. . The U.S. ambassador to Japan under presidents Kennedy and Johnson, Reischauer will speak on "The U.S. and Japan: Divergent Paths?" Now a professor at Harvard University he was" born in" Tokyo in 1910 and has spent much of his life traveling in Asia to advance I taasaieeiPlsjb fJWSW ajeaaa W taW 8M 4bBbbi iPHflP fflPb 8BV 88JJ 8)8S IS M MAiauwamocucncMrjr A GORGE ROT HU. RLM AHOMfiDOIAMUCJC cxriDinc dovhs i i and JUUA B SHIPS auwohctur LJ 7T3 Tel r PvH nTT Li braiAAUJDLl Li U. i r-"- towtthlaf ik"iwinMiiiiiiii.1itiiii mir"""" atayW VM j f 1 3rd I tin I Weekend AcJJvlSIet Anytifta tnlaraatad In aarvlng aa Notary PwbHc to cartif y abaafitaa caHeta lor atudenta, coma by Sutta C In tha aftamcn any day Ms waafc. Tha cay ta $2 par hour. You ara rtot ra$ ul rad to ba a N otery Pub tic alraady. If you ara, it almpty rmam laaa papar ahurfilng; but you ahouid ba a ragiatarad volar In Orartfa eourtry. For data Ha, contact Murray Fogtar In Suiia C, 833-6201. Any ona Irttaraalad In work Ing arrdi Studant Qovarnmant on Ka vartoua commiiitlaaa ateaaa coma by Sutta C or caH 133-5231 aUsmoon. No axparNmca nacaaaary, only concarn tor tha laauaa &at affact ttudanta. Tha CTipa! HHt First Church ol Christ Sctantiat Invttaa you to a Christen Sclamca Lactura an titled "Whara In th World is OodT" Tha apaaKar la Thomas A. McCtatn, C.8.B. Tha talk wW ba hald tonight at p.m. In tha O id Wan Room ot lha Caroil ia inn. Evaryona la ateoma, and admission la traa. Thara wttl ba a vigil downtown Infront of tha Poat OffSct today at 12 noon, eoncaming thoaa Amaricana who ara In naad of amnesty. Rap. Waitar Fsuntroy, D-Waah D.C will apaak on "Tha Moral Crials In Amarican PoiiScs: Tha Black Congrassloncl Raaponaa" from 10 s.m. to 12 noon today In B.N. Ouka Auditorium, NCCU, Durham. Laa Cook, aiacutlva diractor of Minnasota Indian Rasou rcaa Development, wt II speak on "The Amarican Indian in Amarican Politics: Tha Indian Perspective" at 2 to 4 p.m. today at S.M. Duke Auditorium, NCCU, Durham. Dr. Samuel DuBois Cook, Duke University political science profeeaor, wilt speak on "The Fundamental Nature of the Crisis hi Amarican Politics" at 3 to 4 p.m. today In B.N. Ouka Auditorium, NCCU, Durham. The Chapel Hi!) Peace Center will hold an action meeting 10 a.m. to 12 noon Saturday at tha Peace Center, 207 Wilson -Court Tha public Is Invited. Vot w registration: Saturday at tha Chapel Hill Municipal Building, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. and at the CarrboroTown Hall from 8 a.m. to S p.m. AH thoaa working on tha Wilson for Senate campaign, meat at the Union Daak at 8 p.m. Sunday to pick up posters about Wiiaon'a appearance hare next Tuesday. Tha Woman's Workshop collective and tha Association of , Women Students ara sponsoring an Underdog Workshop by man," Firestone said. In a letter to the Pub Board, prior to his approval, Richards stressed the need .for financial independence for the magazine. He said he would seek new advertising, new grants and increased circulation. "Financial independence would be an ideal position to be in," he said. The magazine would need money from Student Government next year, Richards noted. That money would be used to establish a better understanding of U.S. interests and responsibilities in Far Eastern affairs. He received his A.B. degree from Oberlin College and his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1939. He studied at the universities of Paris, Tokyo and Kyoto and- in Korea and China. Reischauer is author of Beyond Vietnam: The U.S. and Asia, Japan: The Story of A Ifation; Wanted: An Asian Policy" and Japan, Past and Present. SHOWS 2-5-0 From"Tbe Erajaritsdream, carrS the EettleKf struggle to surviva.. I -. y---" .svw-....n -....m V LivUlliTiann. FAST O HOT O FREE DELIVERY VjrY COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPONz 2!." "Tl" r -f9--, o a. . j ' 'I TT J-V. . . M . I . VV f -7 TS I'' ' Tak Rtettarda en Saturday and Sunday. For further trtfomtaSon and regittraiion, caH Bartwra at 829-3S37, evenings. Items of Interest Lost: Cm Navy pea (ackef; black with one button missing. Reward oftured. Cad 829-2605 and ask for Tom. Want carped to Milt borough with other Jurors the week of AprH 1. Call Sheila at 842-7513. Found: A man's watch In Parking Lot on comer of VicCauley and Ptttsboro Street Call 548-S411, extension 2543 and atk for Joe. AH membsrs of Phi Eta Sigma who ware inducted in Spring 1873, sheutJ pick up ttielr cartmeates at Room 303-D South Budding. Applications and interview sign-up sheet are now available at the Uikn desk for anyone Interested In working on a Union committee. Save your pennies for tha Z8T Mile of Pennies Annual charity pro act. M makes aanaa to give can Is. Come dance for Isreat A maraihon dance for Israel wUi be held on Saturday, at 8 p.m. at tha B'nal Brith HiHel Foundation, 210 West Cameron Avenue. Dancer should get people to sponsor them for every 15 minutes they dance. Sponsor sheets ara available at Hillal. For further Information call 842-40! 7. AH proceeds go to the United Jewish Appeal Israel f mergency Fund. The UNC Student National Medical Association Invites all health professionals to tha first annual Black Mad feci Festival in tha Great Had of tha Carolina Union, Friday March 29 from 8.-00 p.m. H I 2 C3 a.m. Minimum donations lor physicians is $20.00 per couple; Professional $10.00 par couple; Students $5.00 per couple; Students-single $3.00. Entertainment by Tha New Cavaliers band and BSM Opeyo Dancers. Friday tnm 1-4 p.m, Mrs. Mary Sua Nelson of Paris, Term., will demon strata how aha createe her transparent plastic window hangings. Tha Country Store, University Mali, Chapel HiK. The Campus Young Detnocrela wil meat Monday at 7:30 pjn. in Rocm 217 of feHe Union. State Senate candidates Joe Monroe, Dr. Ben Swafin and Charles Vlckery will speak and also county commissioner candidate Norman Gustavason will ba there. AH Interested people should attend. firm circulation base, which he said would facilitate financial independence. The Yale graduate said people in Europe had taken an interest in previous editions of the Quarterly and that there might be a profitable market there. As far as literary aspects of the Quarterly are concerned, Richards told the Pub Board that he would like to "concentrate efforts on lesser-known writers." Poetry and fiction contests will be used to accomplish this, he said. Leonard Rogoff, the other contender for the editorship, differed from Richards in that he wanted to see the Quarterly take a Southern orientation as opposed to competing with New York magazines. Rogoff also said he would continue to work for the magazine next year. The new editor said he sees his commitment to the magazine as "working towards as great as independence as possible,"" which he said ' W conceivable within two years. Late Show V 1 i. Fri. Gi Sat 11:15 P.M. j Eric Soya's Rated X Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn U u k. .J! ajLaw.aaiaa.i ami iiienwuaaa -mmmm I 2 V i LATE SHOW Frl- Sat 11:15 A R Mt JtSSfc. MgNfc. jr mJ .JU W li il Vi.av' U !k Laaa o o DIG 14 oz. O c O a p"za r-rr ;ri:a rm p I 1 I ir 1 with cny cizza Late Show; v j ijt Js .jesr H FRIDAY, SATURDAY, & SUNDAY 2 h Mar. 20-31) W ON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPONO )
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 29, 1974, edition 1
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