a The Daily Tar Heel Monday, November ntenna lease may be Construction by Nancy Gooch Staff Writer A lease allowing construction of an antenna on the South Campus water tower for a proposed campus FM radio station may be approved by the University Property Division in less than two weeks, V CAR Station Manager Jim Bond said recently. The lease must be obtained before the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will grant an FM construction permit for a non-commercial station. The proposal for the lease is currently being reviewed by University property officials, Robert Williams, legal adviser for the University Property Office, said last week. If the lease is approved, a 50-page supplement to the station's construction permit application explaining the terms of the lease will be sent to the FCC, Bond said. The supplement will also answer other questions posed by the FCC about the application submitted by the station's organizers, the Student Educational Broadcasting Corporation. TnninK a tho fraHIa El - ivinyiik at uib wiuwiw The Road Band Cat's Cradle - Behind Tijuana Fats - Rosemary St. J J Sill El 10, 1975 sought by campus FM station After the supplement has been submitted, the FCC requires a 30-day waiting period, but Bond believes the permit application will be approved soon. "The station's lawyer has been very encouraging " Bond said. "He said an approval of this kind of thing has been automatic (in the past)." In addition to the required antenna lease, an FCC attorney said Sept. 30 the corporation's permit application should include evidence that Student Government will finance the station or that campus facilities will be available for the station's broadcast office before the permit would be approved. The questions are answered in the supplement even though Student Educational Broadcasting has not been formally notified of them by the FCC, Bond said. "This is the last obstacle in completing the application process," he said. FCC regulations call for the antenna to be placed approximately 250 feet above ground level, Bond said. As a result, possible antenna locations are narrowed to the water tower and Memorial Hospital's pre clinical building, he said. The water tower site was selected over the hospital site because the antenna could interfere with communications equipment on the hospital roof, Bond said. ' Plans for the student FM station began in September 1973 when Student Government funds for the station were appropriated by a 3 ft J- ill s lllj I It S-I fie iJ I ZM I It rV mm "'U t K3 AA iNmami n 3 II U Wc mm mm Al Dobbins is a BSME from Michigan. Four years ago he joined Dii Pont's Textile Fibers Department. A year later Al became a First Line Supervisor in our Kevlar Aramid Fibers operation, and now he's a Process Engineer working on engineering development problems connected with Teflon fluorocarbon fiber. ATs story is typical of Mechanical, Chemical, Electrical, and Civil Engineers who choose careers at Du Pont. We place no limits on the progress any engineer can make, regardless of his or her specific degree. And, we place no limits on the contribu tions he can make to himself, to the Company, and to the society in which we all live. So, if it's advancement opportunities you're after, and if you'd like to work for a company that won't place limits on your progress, do what Al Dobbins did. Talk with your Du Pont Representative when he visits your campus. Or, write direct to Du Pont Company, Room 24798, Wilmington, DE 19898 At Du Pont. . .there's a world of things you can do something about. mm "tG US W1TM Of' An Equal Opportunity Employer. MT .1, i "" approve student referendum. A construction permit for the station was obtained from the FCC in February 1 974. But the. permit was rescinded 27 days later when UNC officials retracted letters written by Dean of Student Affairs Donald Boulton accepting ultimate responsibility for the station. Student organizations which obtain construction permits are required by the FCC to have university support. But UNC administrators, in rescinding their support, contended that the University would have to assume control of the station if it assumed ultimate responsibility. Student Educational Broadcasting, composed of Media Board members and local civic leaders, was then formed since an FCC provision allows non-profit corporations to be granted non-commerical educational frequencies. The current application was submitted in May 1974. Students can't cancel contracts without withdrawing from school A number of students have tried to cancel' their housing contracts without oficially; withdrawing from the University although suchaction is "illegal under the contract, housing department contracts assistant Peggy Gibbs said Thursday. A student may cancel the second half of his room contract upon withdrawal from the University anytime during the fall semester, Gibbs explained. The student would only forfeit the first semester's rent and the $50 room deposit paid at sign-up. OOOOOOOOO6OOOdOOOOOO0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO MONDAY & TUESDAY NIGHTS o o o 2 ' y-X - AX 5 ;,ve Jazz 2 shows in 1 ! Uf Downtowny o W Franklin St. 000000000 00 oooooooooooooooeeoooooooooooooo ml Iiasimciciir cum my S1UU lilillVSi n n n 2 v Campus Today's Activities The Baptist Student Union Council will meet at S p.m. to continue making p!ns ,or ,h emester. Recreation majors . - How about relieving torn of the pressure from your behind and go to the rec club meeting at 8 p.m. In Room 205 Union? Officer win be nominated, a constitution committee established, and the club named. For more Information, call Paul Bumttte at M2-65S8. The ECOS Nuclear Commit! re will meet at 8 p.m. In Room 204 of the Union. All Interested persons pleaae attend. Avatar Merter Babe: "I have not come to teach but to awaken." Weekly meeting will be held at 8 pjn. at 105'A N. Columbia St. Eckankar, the ancient science of toul travel, preaenta a film on the history of Eckankar and the present Living Eck Master at 8 p.m. Tuesday, at 1 and 2:30 p.m. Rooms 202-204 of the Union. Gurukara m Singh of the 3HO Foundation will speak on Kundalinl Yoga at 8:30 p.m. in Room 202 of the Union. The Black Student Movement Gospel Choir will perform at 8:30 p.m. In the Great Hall. Everyone I Invited. Upcoming Events The UNC Sailing Team will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. In Room 206 of the Union. The UNC Ice Hockey Club will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. In Room 207 of the Union. There will be a sign-up for upcoming But a student who tries to cancel his contract for any other reason, without withdrawing from the University, such as to move off-campus, violates the contract. "A resident can't come in on the last day of the semester and cancel his contract unless he is withdrawing from the University," Gibbs said. " H e can sell it or move out and pay the rest of the room rent, but he can't get out of the contract," she said. Q o o o o o o o o e o pUs o o o o o o 9:30 p.m. -1:30 a.m. g o -Al Dobbins N "' o 1, 7m ' " aft X ' iam jiw I .................................. v.vnw wv?WivvvvKJi' "" Calendar games, and dues will be collected- AN members are required to attend and everyone is welcome. Or. David Bo brow, chairman of political science at the University of Maryland, will speak on "New Currencies in World Politics: The Roie of Energy" Tuesday at t pjn. ht Rooms 202-204 Carolina Union. UNC Young Democrats wta meet Tuesday at 8 pjn. in Room 207 of the Union. Mayor Howard Lee wiH speak on his possible Lieutenant Governor campaign, and local election results. US-China People's Friendship Association presents Agricultural Communes in Chins" Tuesday at 730 pm. at the Wesley Foundation. The Campus Governing Council's hearing on campus housing problems wiB be held Tuesday at 730 pjn. In Room 21S of the Union. AH interested persons are welcome. The " Decorations and Display Committees for the International Handicrafts Bazaar wiH meet Tuesday at 830 p.m. upstairs in the Y building. The Carolina Comic Fan Association will meet Tuesday at 9 p.m. in Room 207 Carolina Union. Anyone Interested in comics is welcome. The Special Projects Committee wilt meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the South Gallery Meeting Room of the Union. The Student American Pharmaceutical Association, in conjunction with the Orange County Health Department, wiU sponsor a Diabetic Awareness and Screening Program, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday from 5 to 9 pjn. at University Mall. Dieticians from N.C Memorial Hospital will be present to discuss the diabetic diet. The UNC Sailing Club will meet Wednesday at 730 p.m. in Room 206 of the Union. AH interested In the Christmas Bahamaa Trip please attend. Learn about the struggle to build socialism In Cuba and North American trips to Cuba. The North Carolina Region of the Venceremos Brigade will sponsor two films and discussion Thursday at 730 p.m. at the Wesley Foundation. From the wires of United Press International AGADIR, Morocco Moroccan King Hassan II called off the march of conquest into Spanish Sahara by 200,000 unarmed civilians Sunday and ordered them to evacuate the territory. In a dramatic reversal of his previous defiance of warnings that Spanish forces might open fire on the marchers, Hassan said he was leaving his march headquarters here and returning to Marrakesh in southern Morrocco. "The 'green march' has accomplished its objectives," the 46-year-old monarch said in a nation-wide radio-television speech. Even as Hassan spoke, thousands of new volunteers poured across the border into the mineral-rich territory, swelling the number of marchers there to well over 200,000. The Morroccans, who began crossing the frontier last Thursday in defiance of U . N . Security Council resolutions, have been massed a few miles south of the frontier along the first "dissuasion" line of Spanish troops behind broad mine fields. Ford explains recent shakeup WASHINGTON President Ford said Sunday he fired James Schlesinger partly The Campus Committee to Ban Classroom Smoking wiH mat Thursday at 50 p.m. m Room 202 ot the Union. Interested tiSnU, lacuity and sUt art Invrted to show rhir support. Items of interest Sifln petition supporting a PopuUtion-Ecology curriculum at UNC. and get inlormetlon on popuUbon tcology courses to be offered next semester Monday and Tuesday by the Union snackbar. Orange County Track Club Open Cross-Country Race will take place Saturday. No. 22 a Firriey Goif Course. Registration - rwo-mile race at 10 a.m. and six-mile race at 11 a.m. Ail interested are welcome to attend. Found: A 4x8 color photo ot couple in formal dress, outside Printing and Duplicating at the Student Stores. Claim at the Student Store reception desk. The SCAU Food Co-op has been authorized to accept food sumps, beginning immediately. Hew members and inquinea are welcome. GRE (Graduate Record Examination) aptitude and advanced tests will be given Saturday. Dec. 13. Applications may be picked up at the Guidance and Testing Center, 101 Nash Hail, and should be postmarked by Nov. 12. $10.50 each. Late registration: postmarked by No. 19, cost $14.50. LSAT (Law School Admission Test) will be given Dec. 6 (last good time for admission for the taH of 1976). Applications may be picked up m the Guidance and Testing Center and postmarked, with $13, by Nov. 10. Late registration: postmarked by Nov. 17. cost $17. Short Courses UNCCC Short Course "File Handling Under APL" Tuesday 330 p.m-. 224 Phillips. UNCCC Short Course "Packaging JCL (Writing and Using Catalogued Procedures)" Thursday 3:30 p.m.. 224 Phillip. UNCCC Short Course "Learning to Program In Pur Session I. Wednesday 3 p.m., 224 Phillips. UNCCC Short Course "Learning to Program in PLI" Session 2, Friday, 3 p.m. 224 Phillips. Hassan calls off Sahara march because of the defense secretary's "growing tension" with Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, declaring "I needed to have a comfortable feeling" within his national security-defense team. Previously, Ford has called it "the simple truth" that he fired Schlasinger and CIA Director William E. Colby because he wanted to assemble "my own team." But his remarks Sunday indicated that both policy and personality differences at the highest levels of his defense team dictated the sudden, surprise administration shake-up. Meanwhile, Sen. Frank Church, D-ldaho, Sunday called George Bush a poor choice to head the CIA but wasn't sure if he will oppose the nomination. Church, chairman of the Senate committee investigating the CIA, said the agency should not be headed by a politician. Time and Newsweek magazines also said President Ford offered the NATO ambassadorship to CIA Director William Colby and Defense Secretary James Schlesinger upon informing them of their dismissal but both men turned it down. According to Time, Ford offered the NATO job to both men. It said NATO was offered to Schlesinger as an alternative to heading .the Export-Import Bank. Newsweek said only that Schlesinger had been offered the Ex-Im position. v m y Limited, numbered and signed "collectors' prints" by some of the most famous of these artists - Ray Harm. Guy Coheleach, Anne Ophelia Dowden, Charles Frace, Richard Evans Younger, Harry Amis, Charles Harper and others! Were $15 to $200, now $8 to $75. Sale starts Saturday, S!qv 3 All quantities , limited; no dealers, please. All prints offered subject to prior sale. The Intimate Art Gallery Mezzanine level. The Intimate Bookshop, University Mall Chapel Hill Open 10 to 10; 1 to 9 Sunday . T "airy Tar Heel Is published by the University of; North Carolina Uedia Board; dally except Sunday, ' exam periods, vacations, and summer aesaiona. The ' following dates are to be the only Saturday lesues: SepL 6, 20; Oct 1, 8; Nov. 11. 25. Office ere at the Student Union BuHding, University of North Carolina, Chapel HliL N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-0245. fiS C248; Business, Circulation, Advertising t3 Subscription rates: $25 per year; $12.50 per semester. Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. The Campus Governing-Council 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 the Student Constitution). The DaHy Tar Hal reserves the right to regulate the . typographical tone of aH advertisements and to nvt or turn away copy H considers objectionable. The DaJiy Tar H wia not consider adjustments or payment tor any typographical errors or erroneous nsertin unless notice la given to the Business Martagsf wiihin (1) one day after the advertisement appears, wlSsIn (1) day ol the rc!ving ol the tear heeta or subscription of the papw. The DsKy Tar "eel Will mi K imkmhIIiI in mm IhM an 1 Incorrect Insertion ol an advertisement scheduled to run several times. Notice lor such correct-on mutt Sn before the next Insertion. Wildli Art .ft i l; V!t,.'.-. i Reynolds G. BaSey- . Business Mgr. Mi ssoew r . Bailey. . Advertising 15 sr.

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