The Daily Tar Heel Friday, Feb. 21, 1875 Campus Calendar Today's Activities Any candidate wishing to withdraw from the upcoming student elections must do so by 5 p.m. today. Annual Fasching costume festival, S tonight, American Legion Hall. Live German music by 35-piece band, cabaret entertainment and l! the beer you can drink. Tickets, $2, may be purchased at 439 Dey or at the door. CGA coffee house from 8 to 12 tonight, Newman Center, 218 Pittsboro SL Everyone invited. Buy a Yack today in Suite O from 1-5 p.m., and you may win a State tickeL Yacks are $8. Second annual Black Health-Oriented Festival, t tonight. Great Hall, Union. Semi-formal; entertainment by New Cavaliers Band and BSM Ebony Readers. Student couples, $5; student singles, S3; other couples, $10. Graduate Fellowship ot Baptist Campus Ministry will have its TGIF meeting, 6:30 tonight. Battle House. After a pottucfc supper, the group will see The Miracle Worker." Veteran's Club will have a party 7:30 tonight Members and prospective members are invited to attend. Come by the Veteran's Office in Hanes for details. LDSSA will present the film. "Ancient America Speaks," 7:30 tonight, Dey faculty lounge. Public invited. Statistics colloquium: Dr. B.L. Joiner, University of Wisconsin, "Designing Experiments when Time Order Is Important," 3 p.m. today, 247 Phillips. Refreshments, 2:30, 316 Phillips. H. Wood AJrican tadcy. 4CS UnhwtMy Square. and tacutfy tmrttec. "Fordsini tadlne forms sav&iilfflM Plan sign-up and tentative te 2 bjb. today. Union lobby. 10 Out) awat pjB. Sunday, room 302, far lector on Va universe s origin. Upcoming Ewni Bepeal Stuefeat Union moat S pjw. Sunday, BattSe House tor supper ($1.25) and tea skating. Everyone invited. Mandatory auMjOng tor af new prospective Undergraduate Court aoeabara 749 bjb- Sunday, room 217. Union. A tost on 1natrunnt at MuOnt Judicial Oawmnca" w be given. Items of Interest UNC Paracaute Club wfll naid ciaaaes bom now until the and of Mia naiirtir. CaS t3-fl37 attar 7 or wrtta Boa S, Union. UNC Crew Ok anwouwcis the opening of the TANK, behind toe arctwry targeta by fee outdoor track at Fetzar Field. Open 440 to S3 Men. through Thurs; 3 to S Fit. through Stav; 4 to S Sat. Sign up by Fab. 2 m the Y-orHca to run tor YM-YWCA offices. Pra-lasa tonal and Adaatolitratrni Career Examination will be given Match 22. Seniors and gradual students seeking federal gevsmanant work come to 211 Gardner now. by Elizabeth George Staff Writer Applications are now available for foreign study programs in Germany, Spain and Puerto Rico for the 1 975-76 academic year and for England this summer. The UNC program in France has been suspended for one year. Forms for study at the University of Puerto Rico and the University of Gottingen, Germany, can be picked up at the International Student Center in Bynum basement. The return deadline is Monday, and interviews will be held March I. Part of the interviews will be conducted in German or Spanish. Forms for the program in Seville. Spain, can be obtained in 239 Dey. Deadline for return in March 1 5, and no interviews will be conducted. Students interested in studying in London this summer should see Dr. Gerald Unks in 20I-E Peabody or 314 South BIdg. or Dr. Christopher Armitage in 533 Greenlaw. Forms can be obtained in 202 Abernathy. No scholarships are available for the Campbell gets AWS endorsement Although only seven women attended Wednesday's meeting of the Association of Women Students (AWS), the group endorsed Cole Campbell in his race for editor of the Daily Tar Heel. Other candidates present at the meeting were Elliott Warnock, Barnie Day and Don Baer and Harriet Sugar. The only other candidate for editor, Tom Wright, did not attend. Sarah Morris, acting chairman of AWS, said the endorsement was made to stimulate interest among students. "This type of thing is so desperately needed. This was a meeting to which every woman student was invited." "We're not trying to seek political power by hiding behind anonymity, she said. "We're not pretending to speak for every woman on campus." Campbell was favored largely because of his stand on reduced advertising rates for campus organizations, members said. "It is impossible to get the best preferred rate that of bulk purchasers without purchasing in bulk." A spokesman for the DTH advertising department disputed Campbell's claim, however, saying such a practice would be financially unfeasible. it A: OSU) WSm Specializing in Seafood 7 r IBAR-B-QUE FRIED CHICKEN Eat in or Carry out 383 330 HILLSBOROUGH RD :en steak 183-25 19 I . DURHAM (BkT L 1 L- J.I..H.I II I .Ill, 1 1 invites you to relax and enjoy the music of John Warren & Bob Bodle folkfolk rock accoustical quitarists "4M L fry??? 19 i r 4 mm jxmm JOB-GETTING RESUME SETS One Page - Your Typing 100 printed copies 100 printed envelopes... 55.75 2-day service Retyped on IBM Composer... $6.95 IIMSTACOPY(over the Zoom)! corner Franklin & Columbia Streets b03f liters "Dovm tha little hill on Rosemary. . I mgkt loig:.Sf program in Spain. Total costs, including tuition, travel ana loaging. are approximately $2,050 for instate students and $2,950 for out-of-state students. Basic criterion for these three foreign language study programs is a strong w orking knowledge of the language. The program in England, set up this year by Armitage and Unks, costs approximately $963. Sixteen students have signed up. but Armitage said he hopes to take at least 40. Students will leave May 1 3 from Washington and return either June 12 or June 27. Classes taught by Armitage and Unks. including English 58, English 95. Education 41 and Education 105. will begin May 15 and end June 12. Housing and classes will be in a London hotel. The total cost includes UNC tuition, round-trip plane fare, tickets to two plays in London, a tour of Stratford-on-Avon, a ticket to a Royal Shakespeare Company production there and lodging and breakfast for the 31 days of study. The academic year for the exchange to the University at Gottingen. which takes two UNC students, begins in early October and ends in late July. The University of Puerto Rico takes one UNC student, and its academic year begins in September and ends in May. The UNC Year at Seville program accepts approximately 20 students. Classes start in September and end in May. Phillip Berrigan to speak here Anti-war activist Father Phillip Berrigan will be in the Chapel H ill-Durham area March 18 and 19 to speak to local anti-war groups. Mary Winne Johnson, a member of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, said tentative plans have been made for a potluck dinner for Berrigan at the Friends Meeting House on the evening ot March 19. Johnson said final plans for Berrigan's visit will be announced soon. 007 OOfiGjjDQ l 1 20 tr vu- "Ve $H2So(Q)(0)o 1 rvrb. It : f t m?i-Q 13 CD C 3 Lil S l) G5 b) DSP j Now $125.00 buys: More power than our HP-35. 32 pre-programmed functions and operations, vs. 22 for our HP-35. The HP-21 performs all log and trig functions, the latter in radians or degrees. It's our only calculator short of the HP-45 that lets you: convert polar to rectangular coordinates, and back again (-P,-R) ; do full register arithmetic (M, M , MX, M-r); calculate a common antilog (10X) with a. single keystroke. The HP-21 also performs all basic data manipulations (1 x, yx, Vx ") and executes all pre-programmed functions in one second or less. In sum, it's designed to solve tomorrow's problems as well as today's. Smaller size. 6 ounces vs. 9 ounces for our HP-35. Full display formatting. The display key (DSP) lets you choose between fixed decimal and scientific notation and lets you control the num ber of places displayed. (The HP-21 always uses all 10 digits internally.) If a number is too large or small for fixed decimal display, the HP-21 switches automati cally to scientific. It never confuses a smaller number with zero. Finally, if you give the HP-21 an impossible instruction, the Display spells E-r-r-o-r. RPN logic system. Here's what this unique logic system means for you: You can evaluate any expression without copying parentheses, worrying about hierar chies or re-structuring beforehand. You can solve all problems your way the way you now use when y,ou use a slide rule. You solve all problems no matter how com plex one step at a time. You never work with more than two numbers at once. You see all intermediate answers immediately. The HP-21 executes each function immedi ately after you press the function key. You can easily backtrack when you err. The HP-21 performs all operations sequentially. You can re-use numbers without re-entering them. The HP-21 'becomes your scratch pad. H P quality craftsmanship. One reason Nobel Prize winners, astronauts, conquerors of Ever est, America's Cup navigiitors and over 500,000 other professionals own H-P calculators. Your bookstore will give you a demonstra tion today. Challenge our new HP-21 with your problems. See for yourself how much per formance $125.00 can buy. If your bookstore doesn't have the HP-21 yet, call us at 800-538-7922 (in Calif. 800-662-9862) for the name of a dealer who does. HEWLETT PACKARD Sales and service from 172 offices in 65 countries. Dept. 658, 19310 Pruneridge Avenue, Cupertino, CA 95014 Suggested retail price excluding applicable state and local taxes Continental U.S.A., Alaska & Hawaii.