Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 11, 1975, edition 1 / Page 3
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Tuesday, November 11, 1975 The Dslly Tar Heel 3 Prison symposium begins today Former inmate, poet B. F. Maiz to read .Wwx:-A,.w.v- t ,w w Organizations interview on campus The following organizations will be recruiting on campus the week of Nov. 17-21 at the Career Planning and Placement Office, 211 Hanes Hall. Monday, Nov. 17 Clairol Inc.; Prentice Hall, Inc.; Del Monte Sales Company; New York University, Graduate School of Business; Jefferson Standard Life Insurance. Tuesday, Nov. 18 Oscar Mayer & Company; Springs Mills, Inc.; The Proctor SCAU to release price comparison A comparative list of prices at nine local grocery stores will be posted beginning this week by the Student Consumer Action Union (SCAU), Mike Lockerby, SCAU Special Projects coordinator, said Monday. The list, which covers more than 100 separate items, will be posted in the main lobby of the Union next to the rides coordination board. Lockerby said he hopes the list will be posted in the local food stamp office and published in the Chapel Hill Newspaper as well. A summary of the list will appear in the Daily Tar Heel. The nine stores included in the survey are Mayor Lee to speak to Young Democrats Outgoing Mayor Howard N. Lee, who is known to be looking toward the lieutenant governorship, will address a meeting of the UNC Young Democrats Club at 8 p.m. in Room 207 of the Union. Lee is expected to discuss the recent municipal elections and his probable 1976 campaign for lieutenant governor. The lecture is free, and the public is invited to attend. (Vim LMlO err -VM'ri'C H4T-J' DTH-ADS 'WORK FOR YOU Mm For Sale: 1971 mobtl horn, m excellent ehepe. Mot ee tc appreciate. Call 929-3713. ; 73 Plymouth Fury III. 4-door. AC, power eteerlng, power br.K.I,IO. UKE NEW. MUST SELL. 967-7385. FOB SALE: Boom contract In Cobb dorm. Ready Immediately. CaH 933-8122 after 3:00 p.m. Keep tryltifll moiii ill Rooms for rent to female graduate students. Now or beginning second semester. Call 929-1349. Weekdays 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Would like to sublease 2 -bedroom apartment December through April or May: preferably on bus routes. Call Joe or Myrlck. 929-5937. y eWc 2 miles from campua by bus. Call 967-6087. r-TwriF RENTALS - ST-S0 day. Complete whltewatei CANOE Kayaka under $200. Also usee equipment Now usea r HiUtbor0 Rd., Durham, 383- R.vrRunne..Empor.um. . .4ftwn? Available Immediately. 2 A 3 High rent 'JjgloO 4 $125.00 per month. Phone " wiSt J - a- to . p-rTsom. u.l.UW. furnished. Young man peers cautiously over & Gamble Company; University of Denver, College of Business; Emory University, Grad. School of Business. Wednesday, Nov. 19 University of Pennsylvania; Allied Chemical Corporation; The Northwestern Bank; Cone Mills Corporation; Columbia University, School of Business; Borg-Warner Chemicals; ACTIONPEACE the A&P stores on Airport Road, at Eastgate and in Carrboro, Big Star, Byrd's, Colonial, Fowler's, Kroger and Winn Dixie, Lockerby said. These stores will be surveyed every other Saturday, and their prices should be posted in the form of a computer printout on the following Monday, he said. For each item, the list will tell which store has the highest price, the lowest price and the median price. The cost of name and house brands will be compared for each category of food, such as stapels, produce or dairy products. Then each grocery store will be ranked against the others for its overall cost of name and house brands in each category. Lockerby noted that comparisons for each .food category "will be important because people will be able to tell instantly where the best prices are." He said he believes the survey will help people make marketing decisions even though prices are only one factor in deciding where to shop. Although most managers of the grocery stores included in the survey would nt comment on the survey, Fowler's manager Roger Cooke said he does not think many people will use the SCAU service. by Dwight Ferguson Wanted - Attractive terrtale to perform at toptete Go Go dancer In local club. Top pay - phone alter 6:00. Durham 286- 1435. WANTED: Base player vocalist for country rock blue graee band. Call 942-8321, ask lor Earl or Rick. Durham, call 493 2309, ask for Mark. PART-TIME DELI MAN (NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED) FOR INTERNATIONAL CHEF GOURMET SHOP. Evenings and weekends leverv 3rd off). Neat appearance, pleasant. responsible, ready to work. $2.00 per Immediately. We train. Can Mrs. Lester, appointment. hour. Start 942-852S for Support an ecology-population curriculum for UNC. Also, info about ecology-population courses for spring 75 available. Petition and Info booklets. Monday and Tuesday. Table by Union snackbar. - ' WORLD WIDE TRAVEL ON FOREIGN SHIPS. Summer or year-around employment No experience, good pay, men women. East Coast departures. Stamped, self-addressed envelope. GLOBETROTTER, Box 864, St Joseph, Mo. 64502. The ALCHEMIST - new science magazine on campus - needs advertising, business and layout managers. If Interested, sign Interview sheet and get more Information at Union Desk. ujXB ! W wall CORPSVISTA. Thursday Nov. 20 Borg-Warner Chemicals; ACTIONPEACE CORPS VISTA; Vick Manufacturing Division; Southern Methodist University, School of Business; Tulane University, Grad. School of Business; Cornell University School of Law; Allied Chemical Corporation. Friday, Nov. 21 Washington & Lee School of Law; Cannon Mills Company. Information and assistance pertaining to summer and fulltime employers not represented by on-campus visits is available at 211 Hanes Hall. Sex role course offered in spring A new psychology course, "Contemporary Sex Roles," will be offered next semester, according to Dr. Sara Hunter, the course's coordinator. Listed as Psychology 183, the course was not developed in time to be listed in the Spring Class Schedule. Hunter said the course will be a data survey course rather than a "consciousness raising course." The course will focus equally on the sex roles of men and women, she said. Much of the research concerning sex roles, especially IRTHCHOICE Prolife Pregnancy Counseling 942-3030 From Durham WX3030 toll free Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. mm Eratitiffan is ooi i 7 lor yon. RICHARD i ttttTStg n n I ri fill tj t ii t i jL J i 1 A GOTHIC Now available at S2.95 Simon and SchusterA A I V s, by Jan Hodge Staff Writer A symposium on Prisons and the Corrections Systems will begin at 8 p.m. today with a presentation of poetry by former prison inmate and poet B. F. Maiz in the Great Hall of the Union. The purpose of the symposium is to show that there are diverging views on the functions of the corrections systems, Gary Shmerling, chairperson of the Union Current Affairs Committee said. The committee is holding the two-week symposium. The poetry reading, films, panels and exhibits that comprise the symposium are designed to show that prisoners can be "creative, that they are not animals" and can YMCA plans World Fast for Hunger, handicrafts bazaar and humanity walk by Dwight Ferguson Staff Writer The YW-YMCA is going strong this year, with plans for three major projects in the works, Edith Elliott, acting staff chairperson, said Thursday. One major project will be a World Fast for Hunger. Scheduled for Nov. 20, the fast is being coordinated by the Hunger Action Committee. People will be asked to fast for 24 hours, beginning at 6 p.m. Nov. 19, and to donate the cost of the food they would have eaten. Half of the money donated will go to the local Inter-Church Council, and half will be sent to OXFAM, an international hunger relief organization, Elliott said. The first weekend in December will be highlighted by an International Handicrafts Bazaar. Handicrafts from around the world, including the Appalachian mountains, will be sold in the Y building and Gerrard Hall. A major project planned for the second semester is the Walk for Humanity. The walk, to take place on April 3, will cover a 25-mile course. Participants will find with respect to men, has been conducted only recently, she said. The course has approximately 50 spaces and is open to both undergraduates and graduate students, she said. A lecture section will meet from 3 to 4:30 p.m. on Mondays and will feature several different lecturers in and outside the UNC psychology department. Discussion sections will meet on Wednesdays at whatever times are convenient for the members of each group, Hunter said. The 'New Look' In Sculptured Jewelry Specializing in custom work of original design by Carolista and Walter Baum for engagement rings and wedding bands. s 1 1 v e G o 1 d s m i t h s DIAMONDS Emeralds, Rubies, 7 Sapphires r s m l t h s Designers' Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 NCNB Plara Sto " ims if wf i St wvs-i L t t ifi i Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30 (919) 942-7004' J National Observer WESTERN Touchstone 7K 1 ItALCu 1 Ml Liook serve useful functions during and after serving their terms, he said. The symposium is an attempt to present an unbiased view of the prisons, Shmerling said. "The focus (of the symposium) is not to say that our (the North Carolina) system is bad, because the evidence is not clear. However, North Carolina has a reputation for having a very repressive corrections system, he said. The reputation along with prisoner exchange systems that have been tried here, makes the North Carolina system ideal for analysis, Shmerling added. , The symposium will, raise questions as to whether a prison term should be a period of confinement or of rehabilitation, he said, adding that these are questions not simply for North Carolina. sponsors to pay for each mile they walk, Elliott said. She noted that Y officials are always receptive to new project ideas. In addition to the large projects planned, the Y has a full agenda of on-going activities. A dinner-discussion group for faculty and students is one activity directed toward UNC students, Elliott said. Y volunteers also work as Big Brothers and Big Sisters to youngsters in the CGC hearing on housing to be held 7:30 tonight Overcrowding, room rent rates and sign up will be among the topics discussed at a Campus Governing Council housing meeting tonight, CGC Speaker Dan Besse said Sunday. Because of a previous commitment in Raleigh, Department of University Housing Director James Condie said Sunday he would not be able to attend the informal discussion. Besse said he hopes the housing department will send a representative, because "for a public discussion with full information, we need a housing official who knows most of what he (Condie) does." Welcome to Chapel by-the-sea. ; Carrboro. We wanted to move it to some solitary, windswept shoreline near the wash of breakers. Where the fish camp could warm the salt-air chill off morning's first beachcombers a i -. i- Uo ;;ii,r.0 uat i iiv. v iiiagt v j iww 1.1 ut.i iw itti behind. So we brought the sea home. We dressed the hsh camp in shrimp nets and weathered cork. Wrote our menu for a" coastal hamlet. And baked fresh seafood by recipes. So that when you miss the sea, you have a r ; l i i J i f- 1 u:11 ivigm next uuui iu dpei nuu. the 406 W. Main St. 5-10 p.m. every day i fx (T I Convenience shops Scuttlebutt Law Bar Y Court Nook Osier Pit Stop W 11 1 h rr s y s i Vf W " y7Y CMfM n nix s s rsiJi "xsfifn Circus Room Avery Craige Eringhaus Morrison uwc.dlENTr STOKES He said the symposium will feature a cross section of University professors, prison administrators and former prison inmates. The first panel session titled Inmates and Society will be presented at 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 17 in room 207-209 of the Union. The panel may include some prisoners involved in the prisoner exchange program, which allows inmates to leave prison during the day to attend classes or work, Shmerling said. Another session. Women's Prisons, will be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 19 in room 202-204 of the Union. An arts and crafts exhibit containing the prisoner's handwork will be displayed in the North Gallery' of the Union this week and next. community and to the mentally ill and retarded at Umstead and Murdoch Centers. A tutorial program for local grade school students and a Foreign Visitors Committee are other Y programs. Elliott stressed that YW-YMCA programs are made possible by volunteers. Students interested in working with any projects should call or come by the Y. Many of the programs, especially the major, one time projects, still need volunteers, she said. Representatives from CGC and the Residence Hall Association will attend Besse said, but "it won't be just an information session. When you have 40 per cent of the student body with direct experience and opinions, you have the makings of a good public discussion." The feasibility of a new dormitory, the freshman residency requirement, a new Student Consumer Action Union study of the housing department and problems with consolidation. Title IX and visitation are also scheduled for discussion. The hearing will be at 7:30 p.m. in Room 215 of the Union. All students are invited. - Hill - ul w , i ?f fishermen's place to go. ' fish camp moo 11 f Where delicious wishes earth. Residence Hall nackshops NEW! Now carrying: Milk Orange juice Choc, nulk Buttermilk in QUARTS? GRANOLA & Health Food Snacks Frozen BBQ-1 lb. packs 6-oack canned i - Irs. (CARRBOROJf Jk v si i t Mil www i i s f I mi II ii III WW A m m W f if AV v nr a. ninton James $49 drinks on campus
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 11, 1975, edition 1
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