. The Dally TerHw I Ftoy.Jsn. 24, 1S75 OS 8 G am i ... Continued from Pige 1 South. "I think we got the redevelopment program purely because .' I was black, there's no question about it. Washington wanted to make surei I did something successful." . Later, he realized, If 1 wante4 to be accepted as a person, with skill js, with abilities, then 1 had to present irnyself as a person. People can see that I'm; black." "1 often tell people that for the first year-and-a-half I was the first black mayor of Chapel Hill; but afte.r the first year-and-a-half I was the mayor of Chapel Hill who happened to be black. Earlier this year, Lee announced he would not seek re-electiofi, renewing speculation that he planned to run for lieutenant governor. "After a while, one outgrows a position, Lee said,"My mind is engulfed in 'bigger issues, problems which need to te solved before things can be solved on the local level. Lee said he doubts he 'will ever run for mayor of Chapel Hill gain. He said he has faced more challenges here in six years than most rriayors face in a lifetime.1 ' "I am absolutely sure that I want to run for lieutenant governor," he conceded, but said he has several important considerations before . reaching a final decision in June. Lee has commi ttel himself to running edi cat College Admissions Test PREPAj RATION a campaign for less than $500,000 through individual contributions of $10 per month throught the campaign. "I believe it has to be made possible for the average person to participate in a campaign without feeling embarassed." Lee is confident he can win the lieutenant governor's race in North Caroling even though it is the same state that sent Jesse Helms to the Senate, and went for George Wallace over Terry Sanford in the 1972 presidential primary. But he still hasn't gotten into the fast paced campaign spirit yet. The free time he has between his part-time job as mayor and his full-time job as director of the office of Human Development at Duke University is spent playing tennis, watching television with his three -children and working on his autobiography, "Profile of a Black Mayor." - "And I just love to gamble . . .but I guess I'll have to wait until I can get back to the Bahamas for that." Today Activities Items of Interest R$S Seminar. Introduction to HASH. MAT and ECTA. 2 pan. lodey. C9 liarmlng. HSM Foundation w hoW a cSrawr at 6:30. creative service at and a program featuring teraef kibbutz worker at tonight, K13el FoundaSow, 210 W. Cameron Ave. The program mm include slides, discussion and dancing. Pfeeae caf S42-4CS7 by noon today tor dinner reservations. Or. Wayne A. Christiansen win" today. 302 Moreheed. on Stefler Evolution, William E- Gibson, Brookings institute, "Hot Money and the Viability of Thrift Institution,- 3:30 pjn. today, 306 Hanes. Sponsored by the conomJcs department. Reborn student YAF group threatens legal action against campus disruptions LA1 (r omplete Review 7 and 1'2 Sessions '$ Small droups Voluwiinous Home Study Packet Mak;-up Sessions Included here's a difference. Call 4-89-8720 STANLEY! H.KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER Durham, N.C. Est. 1938 1 E? "Zl by Bruce Henderson Staff Writer The newly reborn chapter of the conservative Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) has threatened legal action against the University if there are further disruptions of campus speakers. YAF state president Richard Miller said Tuesday that legal action "may very well be taken" against the University for negligence, if further demonstrations occur. Miller's announcement was prompted by the disruption of Klansman David Duke's Forum speech. Blake Beam, Campus YAF president said, "We intend to make it known that if anyone TAR HEEL CAR WASH I Full Service g Have your car cleaned inside and out. on this campus is in danger of losing his civil rights, we'll be here to take legal action or whatever we have to do." The group, founded in I960 by conservative commentator William F. Buckley Jr., and others, was active on this campus in the sixties, but declined in recent years. The YAF now has 24 members at UNC, Beam said. M iller said legal action similar to steps the group took on the Moratorium Day activities at UNC is possible. The group then threatened the University with legal action if Moratorium activities on campus were allowed to disrupt classes. The University was wise enough to accede to our point of view," M jller said. MEN! WOMEN! JOBS ON SHIPS! No exparienca required. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Perfect summer job or career. Send $3 for information. SEAFAX, Dept. P-4, P.O. Box 2049. Port Angeles, Washington 98362 DISCOUNT WITH GAS Open Daily 8 a.m. -5 p.m. Except Sunday At the curve where Chapel Hill meets Carrboro. 929-1351. SS.' Read Like A King Good Used Paperbacks at 150 Each THE OLD BOOK CORNER 137 A East Rosemary Street Opposite Town Parking J-Xts Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 it n iaS LrU Lru LLa urns - j . . .i To Avoid Long Linos Later on and a La to Listing Penalty Of 10 C1HECK THE LISTTAKER S APPOINTMENT NEAREST YOU AMD REMEMBER THE DATE . 8 i To mh':mthtear tax listing Itsma beaiimntmmtfrMiAho lted taxes in Orange County last year: The forms may be completed by the taxpayer and mailed to the Tax Supervisors Office, Room : 23.Coun.ty Court House, Hillsborough, N.C. 2728. The Tax 7 aker tor various T ownships of Orange County will hold appointments as follows for the purpose of taking tax lists for the Year 197 4. CHAPEL HILL TOWNSHIP L R. Cheek. Lister Carrboro Town Hall 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. each Monday through Friday, beginning January 2. 1975. Each Thursday, Friday from 9:00 A IM. to 4:30 P.M. and each Saturday 9:00 A.M. to 1 2:00 Noon at the Municipal Building at the Chapel Hill Town Hall and Carrbor o Town Hall throughout the month of January. NO NIGHT LISTINGS AT CARRBORO TOWN HALL ENO TOWNSHIP Mrs. Lillian Griffin, Lister Begin nlng January 2, 1975, Monday through Friday at Griffin's Exxon 9:30 A.M. to 2:30 P.M. and nights 6:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. Saturday sat Griffin's Exxon 9:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. B INGHAM TOWNSHIP Mrs. Evelyn Teer, Lister Van Jaruary 7 January 10 Jemuary 11 January 14 Januaj-y 17 : Janualy 18 January 21 January 24 January 25 . January 28 t January 30 January ji 9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. 9:00 AM. 9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. 9:00 AM. to to to 5:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. 4:00 P.M. 5:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. Home White Cross White Cross Home A.C.Wade Harden Johnson's Store Home Orange Grove Store Orange Grove More Home L ouis Allen's S tore Louis Allen's Store LRTG LIOT PGSJRLTY 10 of total tax due will be added to all lists filed after February 1. All persons owning ten or more acres of land must file a Farm Census report. Persons 64 years of age or over who wish to apply for the $5,000 Homestead Exemption must complete application form found on tax abstract. T his application must be re -executed each year to requalify. Orange County T ax S upervisor S.M.GATT1S PRECIS ION. o o jB.IeCe model 960 changer -nm. B.I.C. turntables are not merely manuals with automatic features . . . they are in fact "originals" designed from the start to be simple and reliable, as only sophisticated engineering can make them. 24 POLE. 300 RPM SYNCHRONOUS MOTOR 24 poles (instead of the normal 4 poles) distributes the power inside the motor much more evenly. The result is quieter, smoother operation. To further reduce audible rumble, motor speed is lowered to 300 RPM (instead of 1800 RPM). This lowers the noise frequency of the motor from 30Hz to 5Hz. which is inaudible. BELT DRIVE SYSTEM the BIC .960 uses a belt drive system. The motor and platter are not turned by the conventional rubber drive wheel. Instead, a soft rubber belt is used. The belt not only drives the platter more crnoothly, but serves to further isolate motor vibration and mechanical noise. RELIABILITY B.I.C. engineers have been able to drastically reduce the number of arms, levers, pulleys, springs and switches found in conventional changers and automatic turntables. Performance and reliability are both improved by eliminating potential sources of malfunction, noise, and vibration. FULL TWO YEAR WARRANTY Two years, parts and labor warranty . . . twice as long as any changer and most manual or automatic turntables. JUL" .'"1 Bine BELT DRIVE . PROORAMMKD TURfrrACL3 hetars Tho 4udio Renaissance 506 E. Main St. 688-6311 The group drafted a resolution at a Tuesday night meeting, asking a guarantee of former Sen. (Sam) Ervin's right to speak on this campus." Ervin was honored at a Wednesday night banquet as the winner of this year's North Carolina Public Service Award. Demonstrations planned to protest Ervin's civil rights voting record were later cancelled. The YAF resolution was addressed to Chancellor N.Ferebee Taylor and Ted Marvin, campus director of security services. It recommended that the University suspend, cut off financial aid to and keep records on any students participating in disruptions. The Curriculum at RecreeooM A JanWc Inflow w ofler a special seminar front Key 25 to June 13. Students w attend classes at UNC and parttdpete hi Seid vtelta In New Meiieo. Contact H. Douglas Ss seams. Chairmen, Curriculum m Recreation Administration, 205 Petttgrew. The Brigham Young University production. Teeet the Mormons,' 7 JO pjn. Sunday. 101 Greenie. The pubSc la Invited. The School of JoumsUsm spefling and grammer test w9 be given at 4 pjn. Monday In HoweB 283. Spelling arords wVt be token from "TOO Words Often MlapeBed or Misused" and Ha -January 1975 Update.' available In lul Hoerefl. Students currentty In J 53 aria tsks the test during class on those days. Looking tor a party? Come to Avery's social room 9 p-m. Saturday. Beverages and music lor aS. Don't miss 18 Organ recital by Deen Douglas FHa 730 pan. Sunday. Hoty Trinity Lutheran Church. Rosemary and Pickard St. Open to the public. Free. Macroscope 75 arlR present a gospel festival with NCCU Pentecostal Fellowship Choir, A a T State UreSreralty Wesley Singers. Duke Black Mass Choir. Shaw Unhrerslty Choir,. UNC BSM Choir and St Augustine Gospel Choir 3 pjn. Sunday, First Baptist Church, Robinson Si Meeting of Undergraduate Court Members. 7-M pjn. Sunday, Room 217, the Union. This meeting is very important Professor K.L. Chung of Stanford University, "Brown ian Motion and Markov Chains," 4 p.m. Monday, Phillips 26S. Any student interested In investigating complaints for the Student Consumer Action Union should contact SCAU. Suite B, Union,$r call 933-831 3. Present complaints ceel with false advertising and employee relations. Any student in the School of Education planning to be graduated in spring, 1975 must file for graduation no later than Feb. 7, 103 Peabody. The Wesley Foundation will sponsor a seminar on Theology for Agnostics," 4 p.m. Feb. 5 through March 5. It will be a small discussion group for exploring faith questions and will cover material from Camus, Silone, H.R. Nelbuhr, Tillich and Eliot and will spend a weekend at Interpreter's House with Cariyle Marney. Call the Wesley Foundation, 942 2152 to sign up. Inter-Fraternity Council offers rush invitations The Inter-fraternity Council (ICF), on behalf of all 28 fraternities, has issued an open invitation to the student body to come by and meet fraternity members Jan. 26 and Feb. 2, 4 and 5. The first two parts of the official rush period will consist of informal Sunday afternoon open houses from 2-5 Jan. 26 and Feb. 2. It will be followed by the traditional evening receptions from'7-10 p.m. Feb. 4 and 5. Individual fraternities will also be scheduling their own rush programs throughout the semester. ' Fraternity members will be available at any time to answer questions and offer fides to off campus fraternities. erj ayyw eryw aryw wyw w-fw ejw k w w m ' m m w JLe) eJL J eVLa eJt eJLeaJL ! Jla JL Jt jta) JU eJU 03 ef fe rf af a v 7 r ery eyej DTH Classifieds Get Fast Results. T" r T" nr wv f wv wrwr wrm f i" i t f f wv t-t DENVER'S MELLOW COUNTRY ROCK FRIDAY SATURDAY JANUARY 24 & 25 " S H 6 W Tl ME 9:00 P.M. COMING NEXT WEEK Mon-Tues Wed John Hartford Thurs-Fri-Sat Tracy Newson tho $ 5 per couple ADVANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE General admission: $4-each show 8:00 & 10:30 834-0524 winnnnATfi Restaurant & Entertainment Forum Comeron Village Subway Raleigh THE NEW YORK THEATRE COMPANY PRESENTS fmmmmMmimk YY,'Mi- 'A t r r - ' .v. ir- --Ikoajp. v us v WvJ -:::: ..-.J AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CLASSIC. ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY January 30 at 8:00 p.nie IN THE GREAT HALL OF THE CAROLINA UNION. TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE AT THE UNION DESK. ADMISSION: $1.00 A Carolina Union Presentation CGC Mils disrapHioini resolution By Art Eisenstadt Stsff Writer The Campus Governing Council (CGC)Tuesday night rejected a proposed resolution condemning The forcible disruption of an address by any individual " Only speaker Johnny Kaleel. a co-sponsor of the resolution, supported the measure. The other sponsor. Rep. Ben Steelman. was not present for the vote. CGC also approved a referendum to be held in February which would allow financing of women's intramurals with dormitory social- fees, and defeated a campaign reform bill. The disruptions resolution originally referred to the protest of klansman David Duke's speech. Besides "condemning without qualification" the disruption that prohibited Duke from speaking, the resolution supported the right of any speaker to express his views on campus, and urged the Student Attorney General's Office to consider taking legal action against the organizers of any future disruption. Steelman eventually agreed to delete the references to Duke and the Attorney General's office. Student Body President Marcus Williams, a voting member of CGC said. 1 think this whole bill is superfluous. It's overreacting to a situation which requires cool heads." Most members individually condemned the demonstration and Duke. The sports referendum will propose the collection of 50 cents per resident from social fees in women's dormitories to support an intramural program comparable to the men's program. It will be held Feb. 26. For the second week in a row, an attempt by Rep. Dan Besse to pass a campaign reform bill for campus elections failed, 11-3. The bill would have made the furnishing of false or deliberately misleading information in a student campaign a basis for invalidating an election. Besse said he was "Simply trying to extend the Honor Code prohibition against lying to the election process." Rep. Robert Esleeck argued. "I don't think we can legislate what someone can say in an election. If someone lies in a campaign, it is the duty of the opposing candidate to correct it, of the voter to discern it and of the free press to check it out." Get into fine photography this sure and easy way Let us introduce you to a camera-and-lens combina tion that can give you the superior pictures you want without complicating your picture-taking. It's the Nikkormat FTN with Auto-Nikkor 50mm f2 lens. Both made by Nikon, which tells you all you want to know about the picture quality you can look forward to. The Nikkormat FTN fea tures the famous "center weighted" meter system, ac knowledged by experts to be the most consistently reliable technique for thru -the -lens exposure control. The Auto-Nikkor lens. is. not only superlatively sharp: it's also fast enough to let you shoot in "available light!" This is just one of the more than forty Nikkor lenses you can use with the Nikkormat. Try it yourself come in for free demonstration! Nikkormat FTN with 50mm Auto-Nikkor f2 lens Reg 399 SPECIAL Case 9RQ95 2495 NORTH GATE CAMERA CENTER Durham 286-3539 I Th . Daily Tar Heel is published by the University fc. North Carolina Student Publications Board, dally ecept Sunday, axam periods, vacation, and summer period. No Sunday Issue. The following dates are to be the only Saturday Issues: September 14. October 5 a 19, and November 2, 16 23. Offices are at the Student Union building, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 833-1011, 933-1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1163. Subscription rates: $20 00 per year, $10.00 per semester. Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in Chapei Hill, N.C. The Campus Governing Council shall have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate all revenue derived from the St-jdent Activities Fee (1.1.14 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 It considers obJecUonaWe. The Dey Tar H1 will not cemlder adjustments or payments tor any typographical arrors or erroneous insertion unless notice & give to the Business. Manager within (1) one day after the edveiHstment ' appears, or within one day of the receiving of tear sheets or subscription of the paper. The Dally Tar Heel will not be responsible for more than one' Incorrect Insertion of an advertisement scheduled to run several times. Notice tor such correction must be given before the next Insertion. . Reynolds G. Bailey. Elizabeth F. Bailey- . Business Mgr. ..Adv. Manager