Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 21, 1975, edition 1 / Page 2
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- - ' - ' -!'.' I Th Dally Tsr Heel Tuesday, Jan. 21, 1375 ! C3o mpus iwOienaarw:"5 Today Activities aAI Quiet on Sie Western Front," wrS3 ba shown pju, Carrol Hall. A tnia fick eeertted by the Currtcutum in Peaoa, War A Defiinse. Thm wfi ba a meeting of the Veteran's Club, 730 pm, 204 Union. informal tfaeusalcn of Ma naw world faith, I pm, 202 HeCMitavSL Ttm Woman's Health Cflnic is a Iwo-phasa educational discussion and emwwatton canto held two nights a was a in 6 Sudani Haalfh Service. A group discussion is held 7 p jn. Tuesdays, Xoom 205 SHS. Examinaeons for eontracepaons are also ariJUbie, by appointment, p-m. Wednesdeys- Tha Football Oub wa hold a meeting of old members. 7 pjn, 292 Union. Tha pig roast, spring season, and aiaction of Gf&cars wfff ba elscuseed. Tha ra wM ba a meeting of Young Americans for Freedom, 6:30 pjrt. South Gallery Wasting Room. Topic for - discussion: Trsedm of Speech at UNC." All interested persons ara Invited. , Hacked off because you're In a course you wouldn't have taken If you'd known more about ft? Help others out coma to tha organizational meeting of tha Carolina Course Review, 730 p.ia-, Hamilton auditorium. ' Youn Americans for Freedom will meet at 630 p.m., South Gallery MeetUg Room, Union. Topic: "Freedom of Speech at UNC." All interested persons ara hurried. Full Gospel Student Fellowship meets 730 p.m., fifth floor' Greenlaw. . Computation Canter Seminar, Introduction to the Computation Canter," 3 p.m., 220 Phillips. Alpha EpsHon Delta, pr-medpre-dentai honor society, will meat at 7 p-m., 106 Berryhill. Deans Boulton and Jlcha, and June Ailcott of Guidance and Tasting will discuss "Tha future of pre-medicsJ pre-dental advising at UNC." - Items of Interest Interviews for co-chairmen for the 1975 International Handicrafts Bazaar vrili begin Wednesday. Coma by the YM YWCA to sign up. "ALL QUI ETON THE WESTERN FRONT" based on the best-selling novel by Erich Maria Remarque Tues- January 21 8:00 Carroll A free flick presented by the Curriculum in Peace, War & Defense Chenoe of date: The Chaplain I Association luncheon with David Barber wBt ba Wedne sday. Jan. 30. Instead of Jan. 23. The Carotins Readers wis meet at 4 pm. Wednesday. 103 Appalachian poet Don Wast wW speak at 4 pjn. Wednesday. 100 Hamffion. Wast la author of "Ctode of Southern Earth" and "O Mountaineers." Debate: Frank Mankhveicz and RusseS Kirk. pjn. Wednesday, Stewart Theater on NCSU campus. For awe information, call 737-3105. Economist MHon Friedman wfil speak at SrtS Thursday. Cone Ballroom, UNC-Greensboro. Admission free. Friedman wfB also apeak at pjn. Friday, Page Auditorium, Dufce. The women's caucus of the English Department presents a talk by Elizabeth Wenzet, "Poetry In tha Elementary. Schools." 730 pjn. Wednesday, second floor lounge, Greenlaw. Refreshments. H.V. Wilson Memorial Lecture: Dr. MeMn Spiegel, Dartmouth College, will speak on "New ways to form an embryo a problem of call adhesion." Tea at 4 pjn. Wednesday, first floor lobby. Wilson Hail; lecture st4:15 p ml, 123 Wilson. North Carolina is south of Virginia and north of South Carolina. There wtfl ba 1 00 counties at 730 p.m. Wednesday. Tha UNC debate team will stage an exhibition debate at 8 pjn. Thursday, Dialectic Chambers. Naw West Topic: tha limitation of Presidential power. Tha Latter Day Saints Student Association continues its discussion of the Pauline epistles, 830 p.m. Thursday, 219 Greenlaw. Students interested in population are invited to attend a meeting of the Population Student Organization, 5:15 pjn. Thursday, Wesley Foundation. The Young Republicans Club will meet at 730 pjn. Thursday, Union. Delegates will be chosen and arrangements made for the state College Republican Convention. Economics Department Speaker Series: William E. Gibson, the Brookings Institution, 330 p.m. Friday, 306 Hanes Hall. Village Opticians O Prescriptions accurately filled O Lenses duplicated O Contact lenses filled, cleaned and polished O Headquarters for . quality sunglasses John C. Southern (licensed Dntiian 121 E. Franklin St. Between Varsity Theatre & Intimate mm rices Om iveirviiWe Where? Downtown Jereal Bunys Oowntoirjra 10:09-7:09 tadlemi by Art Elscnslsdt Staff Writer Students will vote today to determine the future of Student Government (SG). The major question included in today's three referenda will be whether to retain the SG constitution eneacted for a two-year trial period in November, 1 972, or to return to the previous constitution. The main difference between the two documents is in the legislative section. Under the I972 constitution, legislative duties were handled by the 20-member Campus Governing Council (CGC). Previously, bills were passed by the Student Legislature (SL), which sometimes included as many as 55 members. Referenda to change the name of the Publications Board to the Media Board, and ECOS man chases by Dirk Wilmoth Staff Writer Watson Morris, the energy projects director at ECOS, has found a new way to get attention. After three years of beating his gums about solar energy, he has discovered the Solarex Corp. Demonstration Unit. The model unit consists of three solar cells, an electric engine and a propeller at a u V nFnnQi& su" m to affirm editorial freedom for the organizations it supervises will also be on the ballot. Polls will be open from 12 noon until 7 p.m. Students must show their I.D. in order to vote, and may cast their ballots at any of the following polling places: Cobb, Craige, Ehringhaus, Grsnville, James, Morrison and Mcl ver dormitories, the Rosenau Public Health Building, ihe Law School, Y-Court and the Union. Besides deciding thefate of CGC, the constitutional referendum will also affect all amendments passed over the past two years. A two-thirds "no" vote is necessary to abolish CGC. If this occurs, not only CGC, but also the new Judicial? Reform Code, the Residence 'Housing Association (RHA) and various total cost of $15. Morris demonstrated the unit Sunday under an overcast sky. When he held it up to the sunlight, the propeller spun, stopping only when he covered the cells with his hand. M orris is using the unit to demonstrate his conviction that solar energy can supply the nation's energy needs. He expects to be showing it around campus to promote his cause. "The people who think solar power is 50 ' years in the future are wrong," he said. Without any further advances in technology, solar energy can replace fossil fuel plants and nuclear plants." He said solar energy could provide 70 per cent of the country's energy requirements by the year 2000. It will take only ten years for the nation to make a switch to solar energy, he said. All the country has to do is put solar cells into mass production and bring down the cost per unit. Also, Morris said, the U.S. would have to cut down on its wasteful energy consumption. He Said a recent report shows' that 44 per cent of the energy produced in the U.S. is wasted. Morris said there are two reasons why 0 n 0 D B... MOO IB mm T ' Saa ' SjJ -ini.-r mm ' U . w 1 i r- -FT. J dTl Thursday 2p!mi to 4 p.mJ (Limit onykogpdr hfyf) First Icomo - First Served TRUXUJPATK) TTrTui.ne n n 301 W. u Dfmteirvoows schedy led Chaoirpeirsoini Interviews for members of the 1 975-76 Carolina Union Activities Board will begin Monday, January 20. This year, interviews will be held over a 5-week period. On January 20, interviews will begin for Operation Input Forum Committee and Performing Arts; on February 3, interviews will begin for Film, Gallery, Videotape arid Special Projects; interviews will begin February 24 for Social, Current Affairs and Recreation. Any regularly enrolled, fulltime student at UNC is eligible to apply. Appointments to the Board will be made by Lynn Mercer, Union President, by February 28, subject to the approval of the Board of Directors. i . Operation Input was established in 1974 to increase communications in the area of popular entertainment, between memebers of the student body and the Carolina Union. In addition, the group is charged with the task of researching the entertainment market with a focus on" attempting to improve the quality of popular entertainment on the UNC campus. Members of Operation Input are appointed by heads of student organizations which represent campus housing areas and units, thereby giving each student constituency a representative for input and a source of information when questions arise." ' The Forum Committee is responsible for selecting the program of major speakers which visit the UNC. campus under the sponsorship of the Union. In addition, they plan and carry out dinners, receptions, press conferences and A revisions of the student constitution will also .be abandoned. Copies of the two constitutions will be on hand at each polling place. j The question on the ballots will read, I approve of the Student Constitution of the University of North Carolina at Chapel H ill, as enacted in the constitutional referendum of November 14, 1972, and as subsequently amended. Yes or no. A yes vote supports CGC; a no vote favors SL The second question will read, f I approve the amendment to change the name of the Publications Board to Media Board. Yes or no." This is being proposed because WCAR, which the board supervises, is technically not a publication. j The third referendum reads, 1 approve the sun government and industry have been reluctant about financing solar energy. "First of all," he said, "there is; no way for anyone to get a monopoly on itj" "Secondly;" he said, "1 don't know of any way that it can be used for warfare." He said all reaction to solar energy has not been bad. For example, Mobi! Oil Corp. recently put $30 million into the development of a solar cell factory. While Morris is optimistic about solar energy legislation in Congress, jhe said the "money now going into solar energy research is only a fraction of that going into nuclear energy research. After 20 years of use, nuclear power provides only one per cent of this nation's energy. . Solar energy has already been harnessed in many countries, including Israel, Japan, the USSR and the U.S. j Morris said solar cells can also be used for "all kinds of exotic ideas." These include putting them on the roofs and in the windows of buildings. j According to a recent report on solar water heating, enough energy falls on the roof of the average home to supply more than ten times its daily power needs. D 0 D A. VJff Dim. to & n.m. Franklin St. - f or 0 oiord classroom appearances for the individual speakers. The early selection this year will provide more time for the committee to be organized, develop a list of tentative speakers and begin making contacts for the coming year. The Forum strives to present speakers of national and international prominence that represent a cross section of interests. This includes the arts as well as politics. The Performing Arts Committee has been established this year by Mercer to plan and coordinate programs in the areas of dance, drama and music. The committee will be charged with planning a balanced program in those areas working with agencies to determine what is available, seeking suggestions from the student body and working with the entertainers in the actual productions here on campus. In the past, this area has been handled by the entire Activities Board. The development of this committee will allow more time to be spent in these areas and allow the other committees to spend more time developing programs in their individual areas. Past programs which would be included in the Performing Arts program would be Preservation Hall Jazz, Carlos Montoya, National Shakespeare, New York Touring Company, Louis Falco Dance Company and Claude Kipnis Mime. Mercer stressed that persons applying for this position should have a broad interest in the performing arts and the administration of such a program rather than having expertise in one or ail of the areas. ! ro) to) tod. ay the amendment to broaden editorial freedom in the Student Constitution. Yes or no. No part of the constitution will be significantly changed by passage of this particular question. Article IV, Section 3-B now reads. "Neither the Publications Board nor (CGC) shall exercise control over the editor-in-chief of the various publications in the performance of their duties, including the appointments of their staff, except where matters of finance are involved." The amendment will change the words "Publications Board" to "Media Board" and "editor-in-chief to "chief officer." Besides WCAR, the Pub Board supervises the Daily Tar Heel, the Ydckety Yack the Cellar Door and the Carolina Quarterly. 0 V V "ss- . oc v Staff photo toy Aik Boyta A Solarex demonstration unit Course reviewers hold meeting tonight Dread those semi-annual pre-registration blues? This semester there may be a solution. The Carolina Course Review will hold its first meeting tonight, coordinator Don Hughston said. The group will publish a student-prepared course review March 17 as a supplement to the Daily Tar Heel. The issue will review all the courses in 16 major academic departments, and provide partial listing in ten others. Tonight's meeting will be at 7:30 in the Hamilton Hall auditorium. Department leaders will be selected, the reveiws discussed and deadline dates announced, Hughston said. All people interested in participating i are urged to attend. 'MMM few N O w N O w 1-3-5-7-9 The Paper with! Chase Timothy Bottoms .2:45 4:50 6:55 9:00 14 H H A tmnmtmai ttatesaaT nisi f-iWflS1 tun mogguMit 3 VaskaJeotar ThDaPy Tar Heal is publisrwjlislslt! 1 North Carolina Student Publications Board, dally I except Sunday, sum periods, vacation, and J summer periods. No Sunday issue. Tha following dates are to be the only Saturday issues: September 14, October 5 ft 19, and November 2, 16 a 23. Offices ara at tha Student Union building, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C- 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports. 933-1011, 933-1012: Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1163. Subscription rates: $20.00 per year; $10.00 per class, postage paid at U.S. Post Office In Chapei HB, N.C. The Campus Governing Cound shall have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate ail revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of tha Student Constitution). The Dairy Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of aft advertisements and to ravisa or turn away copy oosiiertofcjecllQrabie. The DaBy Tar Heel will npt ewer aCtaenents or payments for any typogriphSe? error S arrneous insertion unless noUce Jsr?ve )o t?slness kfaneaerwttninJU one day aUerlhe ilWfBiemsnt ppaars, or within one day of tha receiving of tear ansa ta or subscription of tha paper. Tha Dally Tar jHeel will not ba responsible for mora than one' Incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduled to, run several times.' Notice lor much eametion must m'Tmn oerore ma. nan insertion. I w U t i I Reynolds G. Bailey. .Business Mgr EHzabeth F. Bailey- Adv. Manager I( fnrrffirrr, ll I Franklin Street r phona 91-3061 t l 1 r I 4 k 2
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 21, 1975, edition 1
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