Vednesday, November 12, 1975 The Daily Ter Heel 3
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Light on leaves along Franklin St.
Campus Calendar
Today's Activities The Battle Campus Ministry's Thursday workshop will be
The Sports Cfub Council will meet at 6 p.m. in Room 217 of on the topic "Nobody Likes My Name.'' Mike Bryant and the
the Union. All members of the council's executive committee BSU Workshop Committee will be In charge, and it will be at 8
should attend. p.m.
The Special Projecti Committee will meet at 8 p.m. In the
South Gallery Meeting Room of the Union.
The Student American Pharmaceutical Association, hi
conjunction with the Or ange County Health Department, will
sponsor a Diabetic Awareness and Screening Program from
5 to 9 p.m. today, Thursday and Friday at University Mall.
Dieticians from N.C. Memorial Hospital will be present to
discuss the diabetic diet.
The UNC Outing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 207 of
the Union. A backpacking trip will be planned.
CGC will hold a special meeting to consider the
comptroller proposal and veto of the bill establishing the
position of vice chairman of the finance committee at 7 p.m.
in Rooms 213-215 of the Union.
The second three-hour workshop for preparation for the
FCC Third Clasrexam wilt be held from 7 to 10 p.m. in 1A
Swain Hall. The Exam will be held in Chapel Hill during the
first week of December, and study guides are available for $1
from Dr. Betty Czech.
The UNC Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. In Room 206 of
the Union. All interested In the Christmas Bahamas Trip
please attend.
Upcoming Events
The Circle K Club will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday In the Union.
Check the Union Desk for location.
The Native American Student Movement will meet at 8 p.m.
Thursday In Room 205 of the Union.
The annual Chapel Hill Cooperative Playschool Art Fair
will be held from 1 1 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday at the Community
Church on Purefoy Road. Piedmont artists will have their
work on display and for sale. There will also be baked goods
and refreshments tor sale.
Dr. Carlyle Mamey wilt be at the Wesley Foundation this
weekend. He will head a discussion group at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, will preach at 11 a.m. Sunday, both at the Wesley
Foundation. All are Invited.
The UNC Surf Club will meet Sunday in Room 202 of the
Union. Anyone with a love for our national seashores Is
Invited, whether he can surf or not.
SG may charter
holiday buses
Depending on student response, Student
Government may charter buses to take
students to five major cities for the
Thanksgiving break, Student government,
Transportation Commission Chairperson,
Mike Dixon said Tuesday. '
If enough students sign up, buses will be
chartered from the Southern Coach Co. in
Durham to go to Richmond, Washington,
D.C., Baltimore, Philadelphia and New'
York at discounts ranging from 25 to 48 per
cent.
A round trip to Richmond would cost $ 12,
to Washington, S20; to Baltimore, $22.50;
and to Philadelphia and New York, $30
each.
A sign-up sheet will be placed at the Union
desk.
...... VAWAVAV.V.VAV,VV.V,V.V.V,V.V,V.
There will be an extremely Important meeting of the
Academic Advisory Committee at 7 p.m. Thursday. Check
the Union Desk tor location. Prompt attendance Is urgent.
The Student Academic Affairs Committee will meet at 7
p.m. Thursday. Check the Union Desk for location.
The Carolina Gay Association Invites everyone to a dance
from 9 until 2 o'clock Friday night In the recreation room of
Cralge Dorm. Opposite-sex dancing will be permitted.
Y.O.G.A. (Yoga Organization for Growth and
Advancement), UNCs newly formed yoga group, will
sponsor a Yoga Seminar this weekend featuring Stephen
Ticknor of Columbus, Ohio, as guest speaker. Take a blanket
or mat and wear loose-fitting clothes to watch and participate
in hatha, raja, mantras and kundallnl yoga. The seminar will
be held In Room 202 of the Union for a $1 0 requested fee. The
schedule: Saturday 9 to 12 a.m., 1 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.;
Sunday 1 to 4 p.m.
A conference on The Philippines Under Martial Law U.S.
Involvement' will be presented at 6 p.m. Saturday at the
Newman Center as a part of the Filipino and American
Speakers Forum, sponsored by Friends of Filipino People
(FFP Carolina) and Women's International League for Peace
and Freedom.
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 7:30 p.m. at the Wesley Foundation.
The Campus Committee to Ban Classroom Smoking will
meet Thursday at 4:30 p.m. In Room 202 of the Union.
Interested students, faculty and staff are Invited to show their
support.
The Special Projects Committee will sponsor a trip to New
York City over Thanksgiving. The price for the round trip and
hotel Is $66. Information at Union Desk.
"Thrllla in Manilla," a videotape presentation of the All
Frazier heavyweight tight is showing every day this week
from 1-4 p.m. in the Union Music Gallery. No charge.
The Special Projects Committee will 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, will
sponsor a Diabetic Awareness and Screening Program,
Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday from 5 to 9 p.m. 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 7:30 p.m. In
Room 206 of the Union. All interested In the Christmas
Bahamas Trip please attend.
The second three-hour workshop for preparation for the
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PRINTS
Make Nice
Christmas Presents
And They Won't
Gouge Your Wallet
THE OLD BOOK CORNER
137 A East Rosemary Street
Opposite Town Parking Lots
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514
REVIEW
COURSE
X;
Begins Nov. 19
Call I
(919)833-3990i
GGE
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THE MICHIGAW.'RflBA
A REPRESENTATIVE OFTHE GRADUATE SCHOOLOF BUSINESS
ADMINISTRATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN WILL BE
ON CAMPUS TO DISCUSS THE MASTER OF BUSINESS
ADMINISTRATION DEGREE PROGRAM.
.-.NOVEMBER 1 9,. 1975"
THE MBA PROGRAM IS A TWO-YEAR COURSE WIDELY
RECOGNIZED AS PREPARATION FOR PROFESSIONAL
CAREERS IN MANAGEMENT OF BUSINESS, GOVERNMENT,
AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS. COLLEGE GRADUATES WITH
MAJORS IN ANY FIELD ARE ELIGIBLE TO APPLY.
For more information contact tho Placement
Services, 204 Gardner Hail
e ?. a
FCC Third Class exam will be held from 7 to 10 p.m.
Wednesday In 1 A Swain Hall. The Exam will be held in Chapel
Hiil during the first week of December, and study guides are
available for $1 from Dr. Betty Czech.
Items of Interest
Results of yesterday's Association of International
Students (AIS) vote referendum: The AIS office will be moved
to the International Student Center In the basement of
Bynum Hall.
The Hunger Action Committee of the UNC YM-YWCA
Invites you to Join a Fast for a World Harvest on Thursday,
Nov. 20. The money raised will go to local and International
agencies attacking hunger. For more information, call 933
7535 or go by the Y Building.
Questions about food stamps? You can find out by calling
Project Reach, 967-1713 or 929-8577. Project Reach Is a
tentative screening service provided by volunteers who can
answer your questions concerning possible eligibility for
Food Stamps. You can also get the Project Reach telephone
numbers through information: 942-8749.
The Student Health Service has a limited supply of flu
vaccine available free of charge to students. It Is strongly
advised that students with diabetes, asthma, bronchitis or a
chronic heart or kidney disease, take the' flu vaccine every
year.
TIs weeks before Christmas, but all through the
Planetarium, researchers, script writers and technicians are
busily preparing for the University of North Carolina's 27th
annual Indoor Christmas pageant, 'Star of Bethlehem.'
According to officials of the public service facility,
astronomers believe that astrology had much to do with the
saga of the Magi and the 'Star1 which guided them on their
joumey westward to Jerusalem In search of the Messiah.
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 Hall, and should be postmarked by Nov. 12. $10.50
each. Late registration: postmarked by Nov. 19, cost $14.50.
Thousands of Topics
Send for your up-to-date, 160
page, mail order catalog. Enclose
$1.00 to cover postage and
handling.
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.
11322 IDAHO AVE., 206
LOS ANGELES. CALIF. 90025
(213) 477-8474
Our research papers are sold for
research purposes only.
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THE LIBRARY
West Franklin Street
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WiHL
(Q.' Ij . ? t it ij Ij ($L 5
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For Sale: 5-string banjo. Excellent condition. Must sell. $70.
Call 967-4767. After 5.
73 Plymouth Fury III. 4-door, AC, power steering, power
brakes, radio. LIKE NEW. MUST SELL. 967-7365.
High rent got you down? Available Immediately. 2 & 3
bedroom mobile home. $95.00 & $125.00 per month. Phone
929-2854 or 942-5286. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Some utilities
lumished.
Rooms lor rent to female graduate students. Now or
beginning second semester. Call 929-1349. Weekdays 7 p.m..
to 9 p.m.
Wanted - Attractive female to perform as topless Go Go
dancer In local club. Top pay - phone after 6:00. Durham 28S-
1435.
PART-TIME DELI MAN (NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED) FOR,
INTERNATIONAL CHEF GOURMET SHOP. Evenings and,
weekends (every 3rd off). Neat appearance, pleasant,
responsible, ready to work. $2.00 per hour plus meals. Start
Immediately. We train. Call Mrs. Lester. 942-8526 for;
appointmenL j
SAN FRANCISCO Patricia Hearst's attorneys said Tuesday
they will appeal a judge's decision to start her trial Dec. 15 if he
refuses to reverse himself at a second hearing on her mental
competence.
Al Johnson, attorney for the 21-year-old newspaper heiress, said
she may be the first "mentally incompetent defendant in American
jurisprudence knowingly put to trial."
He and his partner, F. Lee Bailey, said they will petition the Ninth
U.S. Court of Appeals if Carter fails to alter his views at the No". 20
hearing in which the defense will seek to put court-appointed
psychiatrists on the stand.
Bailey, who conferred with Carter Tuesday, said the judge
distorted findings of the three psychiatrists and a psychologist who
examined Miss Hearst in the San Mateo County Jail where she is
held.
He said the psychiatrists supported defense contentions that she is
"far from competent." Miss Hearst was kidnapped by the
Symbionese Liberation Army Feb. 14, 1974. She later joined the
group, but after her capture in San Francisco Sept. 18, she said she
was brainwashed by the SLA.
Wallace enters presidential race Wednesday
MONTGOMERY, Ala. -Gov. George C. Wallace formally
enters the Democratic presidential race Wednesday, claiming to
represent the middle class and insisting he is healthy enough to serve
if elected.
Wallace has scheduled a morning news conference to announce he
will seek the nomination. He thus becomes the tenth Democrat
contender to announce.
Wallace has been paralyzed from the waist down since he was
critically wounded by an assassin's bullet in 1 972, and he concedes his
health will be an issue, although he says it shouldn't be. A two-week
European tour last month was designed partly to show he is healthy
enough to be president.
The race will be Wallace's fourth for the presidency, and the third
as a Democrat. The first primary test of his appeal is expected to be in
Massachusetts next March, where he hopes the busing issue will
propel him to victory.
He plans to enter every primary after that, but will skip the nation's
first primary in New Hampshire.
Wallace has led all announced Democratic candidates in the polls.
Ford criticizes Zionism resolution
WASHINGTON President Ford Tuesday deplored the U.N.
resolution calling Zionism a form of racism but indicated he will
reject pressures to withdraw from the world body.
A State Department spokesman, however, announced the United
States would retaliate for the Arab and Soviet-backed U.N.
resolution by refusing to participate next year in the U.N. program
"Decade for Action to Combat Racism," and refused to rule out the
possibility the administration might also consider ending some
financial support for the United Nations.
White House spokesmen issued Ford's comment one hour before
the Senate in an angry mood unanimously approved a joint
resolution urging Congress to "reassess further participation" of the
United States in the U.N. General Assembly. The resolution,
however, failed to win House approval.
"President Ford reaffirmed that the United States deplores the
characterization of Zionism as a form of racism and believes that the
adoption of this resolution undermines the principles on which the
United Nations is based," White House spokesman William Greener
said. "But he will not consider withdrawal."
Senate support for New York aid weak
WASHINGTON A poll by UPI showed Tuesday that only 30
senators were ready now to vote for loan guarantees to keep New
York City from defaulting on its debts but the city's cause gained
ground elsewhere in Washington.
Three conservatives Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur F.
Burns, House GOP Leader John Rhodes of Arizona, and Sen. James
Buckley of New York modified their previous opposition to federal
aid to keep the city solvent and a House committee cleared away an
obstacle to enactment of a loan guarantee bill.
Rhodes, breaking with President Ford, said he could support a
plan to provide a short-term loan guarantee to enable the city to
avoid bankruptcy. Ford has opposed any aid measures, proposing
instead that Congress facilitate a bankruptcy proceeding.
Burns, addressing a caucus of House Republicans, appeared to
soften his opposition to a loan guarantee, and said he would
recommend action if financial markets "deteriorate" because of the
prospect of a New York default.
GM official says company competes fairly
DETROIT General Motors Chairman Thomas A. Murphy said
Tuesday the giant auto company has nothing to fear from any
government antitrust investigation because it has earned whatever
share of the automobile market it holds.
"As long as we compete fairly, obey the laws and do the best job for
the customer, 1 stand on our record," Murphy said in GM's first
major response to reports of a possible antitrust suit. "I don't care
who wants to inquire into it."
Murphy, in an interv iew with UPI, said GM officials have not been
in touch with the Federal Trade Commission since reports began
circulating over the weekend that the agency might recommend
antitrust action by the Justice Department.
Murphy was critical, however, of the focus by the news media on
an NBC report that he said "is basically rumor" but has a tremendous
effect on the stock market and the economy. Neither the FTC nor the
Justice Department would comment on what antitrust actions may
be considered against GM.
Prosecutors investigate Gulf contributions
WASHINGTON The Watergate special prosecutor's office said
Tuesday it is investigating Gulf Oil Corporation's allegedly illegal
campaign contributions to members of Congress between 1960 and
1972.
"There are still matters of investigation," a spokesman for the
office said of the Gulf case.
The spokesman declined to be specific, but noted Gulfs problems
in the 1972 election were covered, in November, 1973, when the
company and its chief Washington officer, Claude Wild Jr., pleaded
guilty to violation of the federal campaign finance law in connection
with $125,000 in contributions to the campaigns of Richard M.
Nixon, Rep. Wilbur Mills, D-Ark., and Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D
Wash. The law prohibits the use of corporate money to finance
campaigns of federal candidates.
UPI learned a former Gulf official told government investigators
he delivered sealed envelopes allegedly filled with cash to at least 15
other present and former members of Congress between 1960 and
1972.
HS,000!
Our downtown Paperback Gallery,
some 2,500 square feet of it - larger
than most entire bookshops -stocks
something like 1 8,000 titles
(about 100,000 books.) No brag,
just fact.
We see that a chain store nowclaims
that many titles - in less than a third
the space!
We invite them to do a recount or
lend us their magic shelf stretcher.
We also offer a free special order
service for almost any book in print,
preparation for mailing and - always -free
gift-wrapping for any purchase.
Plus an excellent staff and a big stock
of hardcover books, children's books,
bargains and... oh, yes... paperbacks.
Enjoy a browse
soon - and often
- in the big
and friendly
Intimate
ookshop
Open every day, all 7
Open every night, all 7
At 119 East Franklin Street
and in University Mall
Chapel Hill
1
e long-avjaited novel
by the author of
HELP WANTED: Waiters or waltrtwt lor 11 p.m. to 7 a.m.
hlft. Applq in parson to the Wattle Shoppe. 203 Eaat
Franklin.
I J LLL t A XT
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726 pages $15 hardcover $5.95 paperback
Just published by Knopf
WORLD WIDE TRAVEL ON FOREIGN SHIPS. Summer or
wear-around employment. No experience, good pay, men
women Eaat Coat departure. Stamped, e-addreed
envelope. GLOBETROTTER, Boa 864, St. Joseph, Mo.
64502.
The ALCHEMIST - new science magazine on campua - needs
advertising, business and layout managers. If Interested, sign
Interview sheet and get more Information al Union Desk.
We have Adidas Superstars. The world's lightest -basketball
shoe. At McGlnty s Sport Shop.
Pro-life pregnancy counseling. Call BIRTHCHOICE -7pjn.-10
p.m. Monday thru Friday. M2-3030.
Lost: blonde female Cocker Spaniel Sat Nov. 8, around C.H.
Country Club. It found, pleace call 82-725.
Found at the Oktoberteafc two Jackets and two umbrella.
Claim with Identification or description at the German Dept.
office, 438 Dey Hall. ' '
Want to buy new or used stereo albums or entire collections.;
Good Prices. 929-0175. keep trying. p.m. im unw iu can.
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Have we got a surprise
for you! (A nice one.)
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Grad feminist reading discussion group seeks new
members. Call Sharon. 929-3825 Of Elizabeth, 942-3745.
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S(SU
You will receive a .
pa u
off the DTH cd rate if you pay within 10 clays after your
has run. This is in addition to other discounts you may
eligible for.
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