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2 The Daily Tar Heel Friday, November 7, 1S73 1 NC i 8 yy Idlp o The Order of the Valkyries, UNCs highest women's honorary society inducted 23 junior and senior members and five honorary members in a pre-dawn ceremony today. None of those inducted knew of the honor ahead of time. " The women inductees were escorted from their dormitories and apartments between 12 midnight and 1 a.m. today by hooded figures carrying candles and a golden gong. Members were chosen on the basis of scholarship, leadership, service and character. The new senior inductees are: Kathleen Blake, participant in the North Carolina Fellows Program and the u Having trouble deciding on a personal ! Christmas gift for loved ones? it I 0 How about a 16" X 20" pastel portrait. J? I Vk. I i .1 mm- i f UTor oniy oo, Dy tne .Eklund? Appointments now -sittings November 10 m A vine AT PLACE TO LOOK WHEN YOU WANT TO LOOK "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalm 2:1 and Acts 4:25 The following quotation is from the monument of Thos. E. Watson on the Capitol . grounds in Atlgnta: "DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS EXIST BY REASON OFTHEIR , VIRTUE. IF EVER THEY PERISH IT WILL BE WHEN YOU HAVE FORGOTTEN THE PAST, BECOME INDIFFERENT TO THE PRESENT, AND UTTERLY RECKLESS AS TO THE FUTURE." If we mistake not, efforts were made by some to pull down Mr. , Watson off the "high place" of esteem his fellow citizens place him. If they succeeded with some, yet the truth of this statement and prophecies will live on and be fulfilled by loss and curse upon us and our institutions, if forgotten. "AND JUDGEMENT IS TURNED AWAY BACKWARD. AND JUSTICE STANDETH AFAR ; OFF: FOR THRUTH IS FALLEN IN THE STREET, AND EQUITY CANNOT ENTER," , YET THE LORD SAW IT, AND WAS DISPLEASED. Isaiah 59:14, 15. Even if Truth , falls in the street and Equity cannot enter, yet in time God raises it up to fulfill His judgements. Would it not be wise for our State Fathers to read and meditate upon this prophecy of Mr. Watson in view of their responsibility for "such a time as this," and their sworn duty?" "AN ALMIGHTY JUSTICE DOES VERILY RULE THIS WORLD. IT IS GOOD TO FIGHT ON GOD'S SIDE, AND BAD TO FIGHT ON THE DEVIL'S SIDE!" "MEN AND WOMEN WHO HAVE THE TRUE FEAR OF THE LORD IN THEIR HEARTS. AND ARE RIGHTEOUS IN HIS SIGHT, DO MORE TO PROTECT A PEOPLE, AND PROCURE PEACE AND BLESSING TO A LAND, THAN ALL THEIR GREAT STATESMEN; SOLDIERS, AND ARMANENTS!" "FOR NOTHING SHOULD THE PEOPLE OF GOD MORE DEVOUTLY PRAYTHAN THAT THEIR GREAT MEN MIGHT BE GOOD AND GOD-FEARING MEN." "IF EVER THEY PERISH IT WILL BEWHEN YOU HAVE FORGOTTENTHE PAST!' Consider the following statement "out of the past" concerning the conditions about the time of the fall of the Western portion of the Roman Empire: "AND AS FOR THE WEST, IT WAS LEFT TO THE MERCY OF THE BARBARIANS! FOR TWELVE GENERATIONS, MURDER, WAR. ARSON. PLUNDERING WERE THE ORDER OF THE DAY. ONE THING, ONE THING ALONE, SAVED EUROPE FROM COMPLETE DESTRUCTION, FROM A RETURN TO THE DAYS OF THE CAVEMAN AND THE HYENA! THIS WAS THE CHURCH, THE FLOCK OF HUMBLE MEN AND WOMEN WHO FOR MANY CENTURIES HAD CONFESSED THEMSELVES FOLLOWERS OF JESUS, THE CARPENTER OF NAZARETH. WHO HAD BEEN KILLED THAT THE MIGHTY ROMAN EMPIRE MIGHT BE SAVED THE TROUBLE OF A STREET RIOT IN A LITTLE CITY SOMEWHERE ALONG THE SYRIAN FRONTIER!" (There were other things concerning the killing of the Carpenter of Nazareth, and the aftermath, ot which the eminent Historian evidently know nothing, sad to say: JESUS WAS THE CARPENTER OF HEAVEN WHO BUILTTHE UNIVERSE "ALL THINGS WERE MADE BY HIM, AND FOR HIM." Colossians 1:16 ALSO, THIS CARPENTER WROUGHT OUT "GOD'S SO GREAT' SALVATION" IN ORDER THAT 'THE SOUL THAT SINNETH MIGHT NOT PERISH." IF THERE IS "REPENTANCE TOWARDS GOD. AND FAITH TOWARDS THE LORD JESUS CHRIST." "ONE THING, ONE THING ALONE, SAVED EUROPE FROM COMPLETE DESTRUCTION, FROM A RE-TURN TO THE DAYS OF THE CAVEMAN AND THE HYENA! THIS WAS THE CHURCH!" Probably there are between 6 and 700 of these "one things" in the city of Atlanta alone, whose duty and privilege it is to teach men and women and children to honor God and obey His Commandments: Honor father and mother, do no murder, commit no adultry, steal not, lie not, neither desire nor covet anything that belongs to another: Teach men and women and children to disobedience and violations of these Commandments brings down from Heaven the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience. With all these hundreds of Churches in our City, yet we find an alarming amoung of crime, murder, rape, arson, all sorts of anarchy, riot and plundering of the goods, rights and liberties of others some of which is done in the name of "human rights" instead of "inhuman rights" and supported, we think, by "blind leaders of the blind!" Wonder if maybe we have been ordaining, baptising, and taking into our Churches some unconverted "cavemen and hyenas!" (Think it was the late Billy Sunday that told this story: His daughter introduced him to a young man she was dating and asked his opinion of him. After looking him over, he said: "His eyes are too close together, that is a sign of the "hyena" in him: better pass him up, sis.") Sometimes we never know if a person belongs to the Church until the funeral notice appears. It might be profitable if his Church relations, if any, were noted when he gets in jail for crime and lawlessnesl Acneck could be made to see if his Church taught him God's Commandments regarding honor due to God, his mother and father, and to his fellowman forbidding murder, adultery, stealing, lying, coveting and desiring anything God in His Providence has given to another. Surely, his Church being tax exempt, should contribute this help to the police, judges, and civial authorities charged with the duty of keeping law and order, not to mention the Church's vowed duty to God Almighty. This would be very helpful to the individual Churches in giving them the opportunity to check upon the quality of the product they send out into the world. Dvyight Moody said: "If Christianity don't straighten out your character, it is not worth the snap of your finger!" From observation, and things we read and hear, it appears there is quite a gap developing between the clergy and the laity, the pulpit and the pew. If our understanding of the cause is correct, it is a good and healthy sign. Generally speaking many of the clergy, and especially the top-brass, have departed from "The Faith" that The Bible is the infallible and inerrant Word of God from one end to the other: while most of the laymen and thosa in the pew still hold to the teaching of The Lord Jesus Christ and confirmed to us down through the ages by the Church Fathers: 'THAT GOD'S WORD IS TRUE FROM THE BEGINNING: AND EVERY ONE OF HIS RIGHTEOUS JUDGMENTS ENDURETH FOREVER." Psalm 1 1 9:1 60; 'THE SCRIPTURES CANNOT BE BROKEN" John 1 0:35: and "MAN SHALL NOT LIVE BY BREAD ALONE, BUT BY 'EVERY WORD' THAT PROCEEDETH OUT OF THE MOUTH OF GOD." Matthew and Luke 4:4. May we suggest that in judging3nd being critical of The Church you being with yourself. Examine your own relations to the Church in the light of the vows taken, neglected, failed to take, or perform. Does your purpose and conduct in relations to God and His Commandments tend to procude such a climate as favors the "caveman and hyena," or, that favors "righteousness that exalts a nation?" READ YOUR BIBLE, BELIEVE YOUR BIBLE, AND SEEK THE WILL OF GOD FOR YOUR OWN LIFE BY OBEDIENCE TO THE BIBLE. t P. O Box 405, Decatur, Ga. Secret ceremony held in early morning Residence Advisory program; Constance Booke Bynum, member of the Student: Consumer Action Union and participant in! the YM-YWCA's International Bazaar, Kathryn Newsome Campbell, student health advocate and worker for the Chapel. HillCarrboro Rape Crisis Center; Dianne Lynn Cherry, member of the -Delta Sigma Theta sorority and participant in the Minority Advisory program; Julie Ann Fritts, member of the North Carolina Student Legislature and the attorney general's staff; Vanessa Jemetta Gallman, Black Student Movement minister of information and news editor of Black Ink; Rose Ann Hard, production worker for the dramatic arts department; Susan Gail renownea miss u.l. being accepted for .; - 15 at GREAT! Kelly, managing editor of the 1975 Yackety Yack; Beverly Robin Levina, president of the Panhellenic Council; Ellen Frisbee May, Student Government executive secretary; Edith Ashly Moore, participant in the Inter-Varsity Action Group and member of the Panhellenic Council; Julianne Beth Nelson, member of the Association of International Students and the University Orchestra; Susan Patricia Shackelford, -Daily Tar Heel sports editor. Jane Levington Slotin, organizer of Special Studies 90, "The Ideal University"; Harriet Sue Sugar, former DTH features editor and co-editor of the New Carolinian; Winnona Celestine Swayza, organizer of the Ebony Readers and worker for the Minority Advisory program; Elizabeth Gordon Taylor, residence advisor and member of the Carolina Christian Fellowship; Mary Sloan Thompson, member of the Orientation Commission and president of Phi Mu sorority; and Patricia Ann Thompson, for work in making women's field hockey a varsity UNC sport. Eno Continued from page 1 it be sold for? "Land never reverts back to a lesser intensive use," state landscape architect Davis said. Task force chairperson Olive, who described the controversy as "a logical and necessary evolutionary debate that has to be answered," stressed the distinction between people's views of the river and land. "No one opposes preserving the river," Olive said. But he said some people oppose preserving the land around the river. However, Davis said, the two are not mutually exclusive. "In order to preserve the river we must preserve a certain amount of land," he said. Furthermore, the public owns the river's water, Davis explained. "There is no such thing as privately owned water. If the fellow upstream pollutes the water then he is infringing on another person's rights." But even now, while the Orange County task force is meeting, the land around the river is being developed. The Placid Valley subdivision, located on the north side of the river between Guess and Cole Mill roads, contains houses built on quarter-acre lots. The Bluffs of the Eno and the Brigadoon subdivisions also threaten the river. The Bluffs subdivision, upriver in Orange County, is less dense than Pleasant Valley. The subdivision contains houses built on lots of one acre or more. The denser the development, the greater the chance that the river will flood because the water will run off the hard surfaces, Davis said. In undeveloped land, the water INTERNATIONAL CAREER? A representative will be on the campus TUESDAY NOVEMBER 11, 1975 to discuss qualifications for advanced study at AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL and job opportunities in the field of INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Interviews may be scheduled at OFFICE OF CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Thurtderbird Campus Glendale, Arizona 85306 l'.J"; "" "':'.Jn fj a " (30 apartments Chapei Hill-Carrboro's finest adult community Featuring: Resident Tennis pro O 24-hour maintenance service Total eletric kitchens Tennis courts Suana Baths Maid Service available A wide variety of apartment floor plans O FREE Bus service O All this and MUCH More!! For rental information Call 929-1141 Stop by and visit the Villages Clli New junior Valkyries are: Sharon Affreda Ezell, member of the BS M G ospel Choir and worker for the Black Christian Fellowship; Andromeda Monroe, student. attorney general; Margaret Olivia Kirk, worker for the Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center, and Anne Marie Riether, residence advisor and chairperson of the Alpha Epsilon Delta Symposium on Health Careers. Honorary inductees are: Gillian T. Cell, associate professor of history and advisor to the Chancellor's Planning Committee on Student Aid; Martha N. Hardy, assistant speech professor and advisor to the UNC Reader's Theatre; Elaine Hilberman, assistant professor of psychiatry and organizer of the Rape Crisis Center; Julia Cherry Spruill, author of Women's Life and Work in the Southern Colonies; and Jill Stritter, advisor to the Association of International Students. The Order of the Valkyries was formed in 1941 to recognize outstanding UNC women. Membership is limited to junior and senior women and is open to no more than two per cent of the women students enrolled at UNC. will usually soak into the ground before it hits the river. Also, the closer the development is to the river, the more damage it causes, Davis said. The Brigadoon subdivision in Orange County is not very dense but lies very close to the river. Some houses go to the edge of the river, he said. "But at the present time there is nothing we can do to tell a builder how to build his subdivision," Davis explained. Another form of development on Eno River land is timber cutting, which exposes new soil and increases siltation, he said. A 2,500 acre lot that borders the river is now being logged. But until development guidelines are established by the state, the owner of that land is not in violation of any law. Ideally, the task force will try to establish some guidelines for future development and use of the land, according to the task force charter. Ideally, the task force will try to establish some guidelines for future development and use of that land. Calling the task force a fact-finding body, Olive said, "We're not trying to heat up tempers. We're trying to calm things down and look at things objectively." Commissioner Gustaveson expressed the opinion that many share, when he said, "Land is a very scarce commodity, and we've all got to work together to see that we can pass something on to future generations." Hobgood to address press seminar Judge Hamilton Hobgood, who presided over the Joan Little trial, will speak at 6:30 p.m. Friday at the Institute of Government. He will address the 14th annual N.C. Press-Broadcasters Court Reporting Seminar on "The Judge and the Sensational Trial." Hobgood is a UNC graduate. The seminar, to be held on Nov. 7 and 8, will study the relation of the media to the courts and the criminal justice system. Professor Elmer R. Oettinger of the Institute of Government is the seminar director. POLOOY The Carolina Course Review wishes to apologize to Dr. DeSaix of the Zoology Department for having printed inaccurate information about her section of Zoology II. Contrary to the Review, Dr. De Saix does not assign projects, nor are her quizzes comprehensive. The Review regrets any inconvenience caused by our mistakes. lava Four blocks west of Highway 54 on Smith Level Road, Carrboro The .Soviet National Basketball team, meet the Tar Heels on Nov. 15, but UNC Basketball Coach Dean Smith is not overconfident. "You really can't draw comparisons from what they did against other teams " Smith said, emphasizing that the Russians experimented with new players against Indiana and limited the playing time of their biggest star, Alexadr Belov. The Soviet team has worked out every day for nine years. Smith pointed out. It s their duty to play basketball." Furthermore, Smith said the Russians have learned much frornAmencan basketball. "Everytime I've given a clinic in Europe, a Russian has been there." ...But Rabbi Robert A. Seigel, UNC Jewish Chaplain, is organizing a protest against the game. The protest will be peaceful, he said, to make the American public aware of the plight of Russian Jews. Literature will be his chief weapon, he said. "We want to remind Americans that the Jews are in slavery' in Russia," Seigel said, adding that the Soviet Union refuses to let Jews practice their religion or leave the country. "I think the protest will have an effect because the Soviet leaders are very sensitive to world opinion," he added."We hope to make the public concerned enough to send letters to Congress and express their views internationally." ...Planning a new addition to Carolina's growing media scene is Katheriiie Smart, an editor of Alchemist magazine. Scheduled for publication this spring, Alchemist will be an interdisciplinary magazine aimed at making science both readable and interesting to all students. Smart said. "Particularly on this campus, either you're a science student or you don't know anything about science," the senior from Asheville said. "We'd like to bridge the gap between the arts and the sciences." Smart added that Alchemist magazine will present science as a spectrum of knowledge, rather than a divided field of study. . . . Chapel Hill veterinarian Dr. Louis Vine is now undergoing an investigation by the N. C. Board of Veterinary Examiners, Ron Mackofthe Student Consumer Action Union(SCAU) said Wednesday. Mack said SCAU forwarded four complaints alleging unethical veterinary practices by Vine to the Board of Examiners. The board has ruled that two of the complaints warranted further investigation. Vine, owner of Vine's Veterinary Hospital, said Wednesday any comment on the complaints would be premature because the Board of Examiners has not made an official ruling on the issue. Vine's hearing with Board of Examiners is set for January. ... Living in a tree is a "lesson in simplicity," says Thorn Adorney who did just that for a day and a half. The sophomore from Greenwich, Conn., said he made his decision after hearing of a group interaction project which took place in a tree. "I did it just to see how I could adapt to the tree," he said. "It was very uneventful. I spent most of the day watching' hawks and climbing around." Armed with a nylon hammock and a knapsack full of food and text books, Adorney found his tree in the country and stayed aloft from 2 a.m. Saturday to late Sunday afternoon. Adprney, who would like to do it again with a group, said "I found out how complicated human existence really is. I'm not as close to my primordial roots as I thought." From the wires of United Press International WASHINGTON Nelson A. Rockefeller said Thursday party squabbles triggered his decision not to run for the vice presidency next year, but he refused to rule out a 1976 bid for the presidency. In his first news conference since his surprise announcement Monday that he would not be a vice presidential candidate next year, Rockefeller said he supports Ford and expects him to be nominated for a full term. Saying that "party squabbles" made him decide not to be Ford's 1976 running mate, the vice president repeatedly brushed aside questions about his political future saying: "I have no plans beyond this press conference." Asked if he still had presidential ambitions, Rockefeller said: "Listen, I wouldn't have accepted the vice presidency if I wasn't willing to accept the presidency, if, God forbid, something happened to the President.". N. Y. bankruptcy okayed WASHINGTON A House judiciary :?iS5S?Sf Campus Today's Activities The YM-YWCA's Potluck Dinner Discussion for today will be held at the home ol Dr. and Mrs. Karl Petersen. The nl lPli IU!2 1972 MG8 Roadster. Motor in good condition, needs new top. $2,000. Call 929-8892 Keep Trying FOR SALE: ATALA COMPETIZIONE, 24" frame, Reynolds 531 double butted, sew ups, Campy 'T hubs. Campy Granturisimo, exc. condition. One month old. $250, Durham -286-7665. 684-0099. SUPER RUMMAGE, bake, plant and craft sale. Furniture, books, home-baked goods: hundreds of items! Saturday, November 8, 9-12. Wesley Foundation (Pittsboro Street). Benefit Montessorl School. For Sale: Marantz 2220 receiver. Superb condition. 18 months old. Call Sherman: 968-9305. 1964 Porsche 356C. Clean. Signal Red. 2650.00. 493-1580 after 4:00 in Durham. Wanted: male to share Royal Park Apt starting Jan. 1. $80 plus Vi elec. 2 miles from campus by bus. Call 967-6087. Third roomate wanted to share 2 bedroombathroom Foxcroft Apartment Rent $80month plus 13 electricity. Either sex preferred. Call Chris or Giles at 967-9845. For Sale - two room contracts (Morrison) (male). Buy together and room together or buy individually. Spring semester. FMI 933-4023. Canoe rentals - 7:50 day. Complete Whitewater equipment, now used kayaks under $200. Also used wetsults. Noon til 8 p.m., 353S Htilsboro Rd., Durham. 383-2106 (next to Plants Unlimited) River Runner's Emporium High rent got you down. Available immediately 243 bedroom mobile home. $95.00 & $125.00 per month. Phone 929-2854 or 942-5286. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Some utilities furnished. Needed Immediately counter help finishers. WHI train. Apply In person. Dunkin' Donuts. 407 W.Franklin 968-9098. WANTED: Tickets to Janlt Ian concert. Call 929-8400. Stolen: from Venable Parking lot Tuesday night (Nov. 4) Dark blue Kawasaki 900 motorcycle. Anyone who saw anything auspicious hi this are pleas call th Poiic. CONDOM SAMPLES: Learn the difference between condoms with on of our famous sampie packs. Pre shaped, textured, color, lubricated, skins, stubs. Designed to Increase sexual satisfaction. ADAM EVE, Franklin A Columbia SL (over th Zoom). 829-0170. Excellent typist thesis papers etc Fast service. $.70pag. Call Laine 967-3410. Best hours to call - after 9 p.m. i maw i in i a 'I" i Pro-life Pregnancy Counseling. Call BIRTHCHOICE 7 p.m. 10 p.m. Monday thru Friday. 942-3030. LOST: Denim Jacket -with large flower on beck. Lft at bus stop behind Union or on U-bus route Nov. 3. Sentimental value. Rward. Contact Chris. 933-4404 or 255 Jams. . recently defeated by Indiana and Marquette, will Rocky explains quitting ticket subcommittee approved a bill Thursday to enable New York City to go bankrupt. The bill was pushed forward after it became apparent that Democratic sponsored measures in the House and Senate to save New York from defaulting on its debts were in trouble. House Speaker Carl Albert and Chairman William Proxmire of the Senate Banking Committee said those measures making billions in federally guaranteed loans to the city would be defeated if brought to a vote now. Both lawmakers said 4hey- hoped, to reverse the anti-New York "tide" running through Congress. ; iv-rt:-;- President Ford suggested Congress enact bankruptcy legislation last week when he announced he would veto a loan guarantee bill. But Ford's bill was defeated by a vote of five Democrats against two Republicans and the subcommittee adopted, 7-0, a Democratic version which assures the city it would retain all "governmental and political powers" in bankruptcy. Calendar discussion leader will be Dr. Charles Zug, who will speak on 'Folklord and Calendar Customs.' For further information, check by the Y office. Anyone interested in attaining information on Israel programs, employment opportunities in Israel and Garin Aliyah may do so at the Israel Aiiyah Information Center from 12:30 to 5 p.m. in Room 217 of the Union. An organizational meeting of the Jewish Students Movement on campus will be held at 3:30 p.m. in Room 217 of the Union. Plans will be made for the UNC vs. U.S.S.R. basketball game protest and other Jewish activities. The International Center and the Association of International Students will co-sponsor a coffee hour from 1 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. In the International Center, basement ot Bynum Hall. The International Student Center will sponsor a slide show about U.S. international parks for international students and their host families at 7:30 p.m. in Room 202 of the Union. Upcoming Events The Unitarian Universalis! Fellowship of Chapel Hill and Durham will meet at 10:30 a.m. Sunday in the upper school building of the Friends School on Couch Road, off Mt. Sinai Road. The service will, in part, be In commemoration of the 200th anniversary of Universallsm In the United States. The India Association of UNC invites everybody to attend its Festival of Lights at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Wesley Foundation of Chapel Hill. Free Indian sweets will be served. The Saturday morning Shabbat program at the Hiliel, 210 W. Cameron Ave., Is as follows: 9:30 Shachartt service and Torah reading; 11:00 Talmud study; 12:00 Musaf; and 12:15 sit-down kiddish. Everyone Is welcome. For information, call David at 929-3141 (night) and 933-3740 (day). The Student Council for Exceptional Children will hold a covered dish supper at 5 p.m. Sunday In the basement of Parker Dorm. Special Olympics will be discussed. There will be a program meeting at the Hiliel Foundation at 730 p.m. Sunday. All who wish to participate are urged to attend. Location is 210 W. Cameron Ave. Daily Tar Heel Is published by the University est 1 win Carolina meaia noara; cany except Sunday, exam periods, vacations, and summer sessions. Th following dates are to be the only Saturday Issues: Sept 6, 20; Oct 1, 8; Nov. 11, 25. Offices are at the Student Union BuHdfatg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-0245. 133 0248; Business, Circulation, Advertising 93 1163. Subscription rates: $25 per year, $12.50 per semester. Second class postag paid at U.S. Post Offic in Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Th Campus Governing Council shaH have power to determine th Student Activities Fee and to appropriate ail revenue derived from th Student Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 ol ft tudnt Constitution). Th Dally Tar Heel reserves th right to wguiat th typographical ton of alt advert! semen Is and to revise or turn away copy tt considers obiectionabie Th Daily Tar Heei mm not consider adjustments ot payments for any typographical errors or erroneous Insertion unless notice is given to th Business Manager within (1) on day after th advertisement appears, within (1) day of th receiving of th tear sheets or subscription of th paper. Th Oay Tar Ht will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduled to tun several time. Nolle for such correction must be ghren before th next Insertion. Reynolds Q. Bailey.. .Business Mgr. :: li f Elizabeth F. Bailey . Advertising Mar.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 7, 1975, edition 1
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