Vednesday, April 17, 1974 reaking and entering n u r ' ( The Daily Tar Heel ft T! Two youths, aged ll and 13, were detained by police late Friday afternoon after Marvin McCauley of 113-C Stephens fP & i! o 11 naveimnlss i b Mjss' Today's Activities St. caught the suspects breaking a window at his home. Juvenile officials charged the two youths 3d CO BGIMlIiSlF CO 6 gill A three-day workshop examining issues, problems and progress in health administration graduate education will be held today at the Carolina Inn. The "First Inter-university Workshop for Programs in Health Administration in Schools of Public Health" will be sponsored Tar Heel in error; MRC meeting tonight The Men's Residence Council will meet tonight in room 206 of the Carolina Union, not Morrison Lounge as previously reported. The DJH regrets the .error. by the Department of Health Administration of the UNC School of Public Health. Program heads from 12 universities will attend the program. A two-day workshop examining national health insurance and its implications for the people, practitioners, institutions and programs of North Carolina will be held Thursday and Friday following the administration workshop. The Health Administration Department, with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, will sponsor the event. The workshop will provide a forum for a grass roots look at what national health insurance will mean to the state. i a I ' i a ii in i i in linn m i mi mam mum m mwm mim mum inn - i r CD iLg liV) q3 innrtin ;or:yy If fr f KO Iff . . jW?rtl 1 1 '5! J Your 1 974 Yackety-Yack j ! $8,00 i Suits D Carolina Union 1-5 J fl O W Ii n . OF C CHAPEL HILL D. Tho c Here it is: the Izod "Alligator," All Cotton Casual , you'll want to SNAP UP! Your choice: white, yellow, light blue, forest green, navy, red, or burgundy. Shop Nightly 'till 9 at Nowoll's! fl H r ' "ViV 3 ssmm f B i 1 a r .EST SELLERS Now Available f i if Jl PICTORIAL GUIDE Europe's best selling sex manual. A step-by-slep specific course through clear concise full-color photograpns of how to engage in the many forms of physical love and sexual intercourse. 223 pages. $4.95 JOY OF SEX A Gourmet Guide to Love Making. Deals frankly and fully in words and pictures with the intimate details of sexual love. A delightful relief from the usual clinical approach. Lavishly illustrated in full page color and black and white. Still on New York Times best seller list after 40 weeks. 255 pages. $12.95 PICTURE BOOK OF SEXUAL LOVE One of the most beautiful and practical books on phys ical love ever published. Over 195 photographs, many in color, of a young married coup!e. nude, in various posi tions. Over 225,000 hardbound copies sold at $15. Now available in soft cover. 320 pages. $4.95 Adam & Eve Franklin & Columbia St. 1 (over the Zoom Zoom) 929-0170 9-6 Mon.-Fri. 1 0-4 Sat. i i!mm 1 r TO The Daily Tar Heel It published by the University of . ;X North Carolina Student Publications Bord, dally 'X except Sunday, exam periods, vacation, and ' ;W summer periods. Ho Sunday Issue. The following ;X dates are to be the only Saturday Issues: September , X 15, 22, & 29, October 27, and November 10 17. O'fices are at the Student Union building, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone ;X numbers: News, Sports 933-1011, 933-1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising 833-1163. X; Subscription rates: $16.00 per year; (8.00 per X;' semester. X Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Offlca in C;.; Chapel Hill, N.C. X; i Ths Campiii Governing Council han haya 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 reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise or turn away copy tt.cohsiders-objectionable. The Dally Tar Heel wiil not consider adjustments or payments for any typographical errors or erroneous Insertion jn!ets notice Is given to the Business teamr within (1) one dey after the advertisement appears, or within one dey of the recelvng of tearj sfttets or 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. Notice for such correction must, be s'vn before the next insertion. sEiops d 'fll fjpp XT". . , "ON CAMPUS" with breaking and entering with intent to commit larceny. Police subsequently found a lawnmower taken from the residence of Wayne Shew, 108 Noble St., in the basement of one of the juvenile's homes. He was later charged with larceny of the lawnmower. Two arrests made Chapel Hill Police officers arrested Paul A. Saltzman and Charles A. Stanford Saturday night on charges of second degree burglary and larceny of stereo equipment from a private residence. Saltzman. 17, of 717 Emery Drive, was released on $7,500 bond and Stanford, 1 8, of 1420 Whitehead Drive, on $8,000 bond. Stanford, the son of state representative Trish Stanford Hunt of Chapel Hill, was also charged by police with assault of an officer. Police were called to the home of Dr. Robert Nelson. 903 Coker Drive, at 1 1.:30 p.m. Saturday, where the arrests occurred. A men' conseJousness-raislng group win Hold an organizational meeting tonight at 7 at 151 Isley Street, behind fee Municipal Building. Anyone interested in toining the group on a permanent basis is invited to attend. For information, cal 967-1224. The UNC Reader's Theater in conjunction with the Carotins Union will present The Women and Lite of EUlgar A Poe tonight and Thursday In Deep Jonah. Admission is free. Interested m canoeing, tubing or rafting? The UNC Outing Cub will be taking a trip to the Nantahala River this weekend. Rides and plans wta be set tonight at 7:33 in the Student Union. Everyone la welcome. No experience la necessary. Either be at the meeting or can Jere Jay, 942-50S3, lor Information. The institute of Latin American Studies will hold Its weekly Informal luncheon meeting today from noon to 1 :30 p.m. in a new location 570 Hamilton Halt AH trite rested faculty members, students, and friends are urged to bring lunch and come. The UNC and Duke Physics Departments will present Dr. Sheldon Datz of Oak Ridge National Laboratory who will speak on "On the States of Ions Penetrating Solids" today at 4 p.m. in Room 265 Phillips Hall. Tea and coffee will be served in Room 277 at 3:30 p.m. The Chemistry Department of UNC win sponsor a seminar today at 4 p.m. Professor Donald T. Sawyer of University of California at Riverside will speak on "Electrochemical and NMR studies of Motybdenum-Riboflavin Systems in DMSO." Coffee will be served in the lower lobby at 3:30. There wiil be a meeting of the Society of Janus tonight at CtrrcknalliiiCli Special 80AC- :;clc:m:i kyB-AiidS to Boohnq Union-room 201 siu(Lmi5, taciuru, stair . DU eligible j ATT E i! T 1 0 i! STUDE NTS ! Due to popular demand. Honey's will continue the Gf;BG33Ql!Oo Monday night is ITALIAN SPAGHETTI NIGHT at HONEY'S Tangy Italian spaghetti served with crisp garden salad and garlic bread EAT TIL YOUR HEART'S CONTENT...$1.95. Wednesday night SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN. ..Delicious golden fried chicken and crisp french fries ALL YOU CAN EAT... $2.35. Friday night have a FISH FEAST with us. GOLDEN FRIED FISH FILLET and crisp french fries. A WHALE OF A DINNER for a HONEY of an appetite (of course all you can eat).. .$1 .95. Make Streak a s? to Honey's!!! ( V Si 'S 3 Across from Glen Lennox Honey's Hours are now: 7am-9 pm O Fri-Sat: 7 am-10 pm 1 1 I ri.Il il.il o 111 u f i s fl! 0111 1 (lX!liMl. (tti! 3 jij-t i Now Interviewing RENTAL AGENTS for full-time and part-time employment. Must be personable, experience not necessary,sa!ary open. Call 967-2224 for interview appointment. TOO tn the Frank Porter Grwham Lounge In the Union. Lasers and Holography: Dr.T. Grtrtdstaff of DuPont labe will be giving a presentation of the principles of hotography, demonstrating his holograms end discussing fne present state o4 ee an and future appAcations. The presentation Is today at 4 p.m. In Venabie. The public Is Invited. An informs ton and get-acquainted meeting win be held for anyone Interested in working with the United Farm Workers Boycott In Chapel Hill, tonight at 7:30 p.m. In the Newman Center Library. The Elections Board wiH meet tonight at 7 JO in the Student Union. Check the desk for the room number. Itams of Interest Absentee ballot application cards are stiS! available at the Student Union Desk for Orange County voters who win be out of town for the May 7 primary. A new supply of cards haa arrived. The nation's eight ranked Parachute Team, from UNC, wCH give a demonstration ump at the Campus Camhra! at 7 p.m. Thursday on Ehringhaus Raid. Team co-captains Tony Cockrell and Jim ReUly along wtth accuracy ace "Alex" Alexander wilt be making the Jump, weather permitting. There are people around here who care about how you deal with your problems. Some of them are at SWITCHBOAR D, 24 hours a day. Make a human connection, call SWITCHBOARD, 929-7177. A seminar in R to-Romance Language and Literature wltl be offered next fall. The seminar wHI cover the language, literature and folklore of the Romansh language, the fourth national language of Switzerland. Graduate students are expected to write a paper under one of the above divisions. Undergraduates may take the course with the permission of the instructor. Register under Special Topics 95. For more information contact Professor Maissen, Dey Han 328, 933 2033, Extension 267. 0 DCis UV, ry. S) 1 V I. 1 mr A I i ') Pv-rmtesion stps for Herth Education 33 are avaBabie now at tt School of Public Heatth m Room 319. Enrcflment is Unfed. The School of Pharmacy le offering a new Inter-d- sc iphna ry course, "Drugs and Society," beginning In e fsIL The two hour credit course la tentattvery scheduled for Morday nights. Those Interested should call 966-1121 for perriisxion. Attend Be Natonal Impeachment RaBy In Washington D C- April 27. Buses wtH be leaving Chapel H!9 at 5 a.m. thai mornteg. but you need to reserve a place now. The cost for the round trip Is J IS. Information and reservations available at fr e Impeachment Table tn the Pit, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., or tn tr Union if raining. Deadline for paying Is Friday. April 20. Sjwnish 35 Latin American Prose Fiction in Translation. We're back with even a greater variety and selection of greet novels and short stories from south of the border. No knowledge of Spanish Is necessary. Be sure to ore-register if you want to enfoy your Fal semester. CB Read Gflgen, 933 2582. for futner details. Live m luxury and air conditioned comfort this summer. Lunch and dinner five days a week, free parking, sun deck. $203 per summer session. Women oniy. Call 9S8-9398 or write Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. 277 E. Rosemary Street. Jim Keenan, who's running lor district court Judge in Du-ham County, needs campaign workers. If Interested, contact Can dace Carraway at the Law School. Going to summer school? The Kappa Delta Sorority House wUl be open both sessions, $200 per session Includes room and board. The house is located at 219 E. Franklin Street across from the Planetarium, close to campus and downtown. If interested, call the house at: 968-91 SO or 942 46(9. First come, first served. Maiorette try-outs for the 1974-75 Marching Tarheel Band will be held Saturday, April 27 at 10 a.m. Interested persons should contact the Band Office in Suite A of the Carolina Union or caH 933-1080 for more Information. .'it. ' r- JM Dinner (Salad & Tea) 4:3o -5130 (. Barneses Gas Main. St.. Carrboro While others raised their prices this month, we went down. 49.9 & 52.9 Student managed and operated open in the afternoons. Tff f s) -f f-' -i- 1 E3IAW1S IWSTAoCOPY THE KIND OF SERVICE YOU NEED AT A TIME LIKE THIS!!! Service while you wait Quality work guaranteed Overnight rush service for large orders Sorting and Stapling 3 hole punched paper (no extra charge) Colored paper and legal paper Transparencies 50-20 irJSTACOPY Franklin & Columbia St. (over the Zoom) 929-0170 9-6 Mon.-Fri. 10-4 Sat. U3A Y 7 i feaarj1- ,ail Worm Gustaveson For Orange County Commissioner "One person can make a difference" Norm Is director of the UNC YM-YWCA. He can work with young people and knows their hopes. Vote Tuesday May 7, 1 974 (I Jtotoumr euaaMssUissiSr WktttmWmw aaMeaaaaws' Now, full scholarship assistance for your junior and senior years, plus chance to become a leader in the nuclear energy field. Tuition, books and educational fees are a!l included in this new NROTC Nuclear Propulsion Candidate program. Along with $1 00 a month to help you with your living expenses. And on top of that you have an opportunity to build a rewarding career for yourself in the fast-growing nuclear energy field. To qualify, you must have completed one semester each of calculus and physics, or two semesters of calculus and have a B- average or better. 'Depending upon your performance, you will be inter viewed during your senior year for the Navy's Nuclear Program and for training as a Navy Nuclear Officer. If you can qualify for the demanding yet rewarding nuclear field you can anticipate five years of employ ment as a regular Navy officer. Forfuil details on this new NROTC Nuclear Propulsion Candidatexprogram, phone or see your local Navy recruiter. Be someone special in the Navy. See Lt. Gary Hein, Student Union 1 5-19 April or write: Navy Recruiting District, P.O. Box 2506, Raleigh, N.C. 27609; or call collect (919) 832-6629. f " ;rrsy Pool ....... f JoWttan ......f-. n.. Business Mgr. J ...Advir. Mgr.