Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 11, 1976, edition 1 / Page 2
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y 2 Th Oaily Tar Heel Monday. October 11. 1976 WW I Hill 'I t W- Classic mantailored shirtinn fnr A. -ii' . j. IVJII 0 1 1 lUil ?' , .17 stunning looks. t . Menswear for women is a 7 ! I definite plus this season it 1 Gant does the flannel "F -u I plaid shirt in soft cotton ;;: W. flannel A hftni iifi il orr i) 1 WJ ment of P,aids for a!l your - .J J skirts, slacks and jeans - ... 24.00. ' -4 t r fiL I s- if s t x .vvv 1 fKLgr . Crazy Horse does the crewneck sweater in warm 100 Shetland wool. The crewneck sweater has long been a favorite of everybody. Wear this crewneck on week end getaways or anytime you feel like having fun. Especially nice over menswear shirts! In a beautiful assortment of fashion colors, sizes S-M-L . . . 18.00. Use Ivey's monograming service to personalize your favorite sweater, too! Ivey's attitudes v RA YCU'M lH!lYP LOCKED M OUT OF THB 'ROOM WHILB 1 ;f w rwevty, ; ey. hcrf Trtrrt rough! .Wf.- ; Jf - - '.. : Z MW. 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Compiled by Tenley Ayers Activities Today There will be an Inter FrsUmltySororlty Christian Feikwthip meeting from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 11, at the upstairs Campus Y. All interested are invited to come. Delta Sigma Pi will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 11, in Room 217 of the Carolina Union. The UNC Surf Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 11, in the South Gallery meeting room in the Carolina Union. Everyone is invited. Youth for Easter Seals will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 1 1, in 103 Greenlaw for its regular meeting. All interested persons are encouraged to attend. Any one interested in joing the darkroom co-op and using the first order of chemicals can sign up on Monday between 10:50 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. by the Union information desk. The first fee is $3. John Staudhammer of N.C. State University and U.S. Army Computer Systems Command will speak on "Computer Program Estimation" and. "Color Computer Graphics' at 3 p.m. Monday, Oct 11, in 247 Phillips HalL Refreshments will be served in New West Lounge after the colloquium. Sponsored by the Departments of Computer Science. Interested in a career in an Allied Health Field? Find out about Medical Technology at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 11 in Room 202 of the Carolina Union. Members of the present Medical Technology class will present slides and answer questions about their field. The Society of Professional Journalists presents a panel discussion on "How to Get Published." Starts at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct 11, in 203 Howell HalL All members are urged to attend. "I am the Ancient One" Me her Baba. Our group continues to meet at 8 p.m. Mondays at 105-12 N. Columbia St. We would like to have you join us. The IRSS Short Course presents The SYMAP Computer Mapping Program" at 2 p.m. in 212 Saunders Hall and the UNCCC Short Course, "Tape Data Set Usage" at 3 p.m. in 228 Phillips Hall, Monday, Oct 11. "What is Conservatism and Can it Be Cured?" Panel discussion by the UNC Conservative Society (AKA Orange County Anti-Jacobin League), at 7:30 p.m., Monday, Oct 11 in the Frank Porter Graham Lounge in the Carolina Union. Christopher Tletze, senior consultant with the Population Council, Washington, D.C., will present a free, public lecture on "Legal Abortion: Demographic and Public Health Aspects" at 4 p.m. Monday, Oct 1 1, in T-7 New Carroll HalL The Baptist Student Union Council will meet at 5 p.m. Monday, Oct. 1 1, at the Battle House. President Joe Miller will preside over the meeting. The Bible study group will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 12, at the Buttle House. All who are interested are invited. Upcoming Events The Union Social Commlttaa meeting will be at 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 12, at "He's Not Here." It will be a short meeting. "Scholar's Debate: Is Women's History Relevant to 'Real' HistoryT A panel discussion featuring Peter Filene, Jacqueline Hall, Joan Scott and Louise A. Tilly of the University of Michigan will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 12, in 569 Hamilton Hall. The public is invited. The meeting for Informal faculty group for innovative teaching will be at 3 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 12, in Room 213 of the Carolina Union. Speaker is Don Scott, history department, at N.C. State University. Topic: New approaches in teaching history. We need your support and attendance. ' ;. The Graduate History Society presents Louise Tilly, University of Michigan, at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 12, in Room 202 of the Carolina Union. Dr. Tilly will speak on "Women's Work and Family Lives in Nineteenth Century French Cities." The public is invited. Common Cause will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 12, in Room 217 of the Carolina Union. Preparations for the mock election will be made. All interested persons are encouraged to attend. The UNC Sailing Team end selling dub officers will meet at 8:30 p.m., Oct 12, in Room 215 of the Carolina Union. Plans for Saturday's UNC-Duke regatta will be discussed. The sailing team still needs students to sail or be on the roll committee for Saturday's races. There will be a meeting of the Circle K Club at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 12, in Room 206 of the Carolina Union. Various projects will be discussed. Everyone is welcome and invited to get involved. "Good Ole AKA Day"; From 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 12, in the Pit Come out and enjoy music, dancing, refreshments, and -lots of fellowship. The Navy will be celebrating its 20 1st birthday in conjunction with University Day. The celebration will begin at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1 2, on the Astroturf. All those interested are invited to attend. There will be a meeting concerning the csmpus transportation and parking problems at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 12, in 100 Hamilton HalL All dorm governors, presidents, student government personnel and other interested persons are urged to attend. The Zoology Undergraduate Student Association is holding its first fall organizational meeting 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 12, in 215 of the Carolina Union. Individuals will be assigned to the particular projects that interest them and future plans for the year will be discussed. Come join us. All international women students are invited to a potluck dinner with the Association for Women Students at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 12, at the Wesley Foundation, 214 Pittsboro St The rape slide show, "Lady Beware," will be shown also. All international students and members of AWS are urged to attend. College Women In Broadcasting (CYD) invitesa its members to meet the "International Communications" panelists for lunch at 12 noon Tuesday, Oct 12, at the Station in Carrboro. There will be a short, but very important, meeting of the N.C. Cosstal Club at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 12, in the South Lounge of the Carolina Union. All members please be on time. Items of Interest The N.C. Zen Center will hold a 7 day meditation with Zen master Joshu Sasaki Roshi Oct. 26-Nov. 2. For more information, call Susanna at 542-4379. Interested in International relations and communications? The Association of International Students is starting a publication and welcomes those interested in writing, layout, advertising, circulation and business. Creative ideas will be appreciated! Call 933-5661 (8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays) and leave your name, address and phone number. Or come to our meeting at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Oct 12, in the International Center (Bynum Hall Basement). Interested in a one day trip to Washington, D.C. on an East Asian cultural tour? On Friday, Oct 22, see Japanese gardens, Oriental art and eat a Chinese dinner. Round trip price is $16, payable by Oct 15. For more information, contact Larry Kessler at 933-5091. Monster Book Sale at Chapel Hill Public Library, E. Franklin and Boundary Streets. Book Fair on Monday, Oct. 11 and Tuesday, Oct 12 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Wednesday, Oct. 13 from 10 a.m. to 4p.m. around campus E. Walton Jones has been named vice president for research and public service programs for the consolidated university. An associate vice president in the UNC general administration since 1973, he played a key role in the formation of the Coastal Plains Regional Commission and is a former executive director of the multistate organization. Margaret C. Gebhardt clinical assistant professor of pharmacy in the School of PJiarmacy has won the 1976 North Carolina Society of Hospital Pharmacists Achievement Award. She received the award for her high professional ideals, moral character and good citizenship, and her significant contributions to hospital pharmacy. She has been associated with Rex Hospital in Rakigh and North Carolina Memorial Hospital in various capacities including clinical pharmacy specialist, director of drug information and coordinator of clinical pharmacy service. .Morris SbJfTman, professor of environmental sciences and engineering in the School of Public Health, has been appointed to a five-year term on the World Health Organization's expert panel on food hygiene. In November, he will travel to the Pan American Health Organization's Zoonosis Center in Buenos Aires, Argentina, as a member . of a scientific advisory committee. JJ, Johnson, professor of environmental sciences and engineering in the School of Public Health, has been awarded a SI 14,000 grant from the Environmental Protection Agency for research in ultraviolet disinfection of filtered and unfiltered secondary wastewater pollution. Adjunct Prof. Forest O. Mixon, associated with the Research Triangle Institute, is a coprincipal investigator of the project. According to Johnson, the research team, including Assoc. Prof. Linda W. Little and Donald E. Francisco, faculty members in the Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, and students John Stanley and Kent Aldrkh, will cooperate with the city of Durham in studying the possibility of replacing chlorination with ultraviolet light in treating municipal wastewater. "An Improved Method for the Isolation Organic Materials from Water Systems Using XAD-2 Macroreticular Resin, a paper authored by doctoral student David Schnare and Prof. Russell F. Christman and Asst. Prof. Frederic K. Pfaender of the Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, was presented last week at the 49th annual conference of the Water Pollution Control Federation in Minneapolis, Minn. Richard H. Shachtman, associate professor of 'New York Mary' Jazz at Its Best Bill Morrison, The Raleigh News & Observer NEW YORK MARY MEMORIAL HALL AT 8 PM MONDAY, OCT. 18 Whether your roots are jazz- oriented, rock or even rhythm & blues, you should find something in this band to soothe your musical preferences ... New York Mary is a fresh. exciting union of jazz and rock played by talented, sincere musicians. If the forthcoming album lives up to the live performance, it will be a definite plus in any collection.. Bruce Macomber. Down Beat Magazine The group maintained high volume and energy levels throughout the evening, but demonstrated a welcome sensitivity and sublety. Tugging, teasing, and prodding the melody, they never strayed far enough away to lose it, playing with either enough power to drive a large truck or with the softness of one of the September breezes floating across the stage. . .It was the brass, however, which truly seemed to win the hearts and ears of the audience. Tom Feran. 77W (N. Y.) Advocate TICKETS JUST $1 AT THE UNION DESK A Carolina Union Presentation .n U. biostatistics in the School of Public Health and in the Curriculum in Operations Research and Systems Analysis, has been elected treasurer of the health applications section of the Operations Research Society of America. The section fosters the application of quantitative modeling techniques to heajth care problems. It serves the members of a variety of organizations including the Operations Research Society of America, Institute of Managementcience, and Society for Advanced Medical Systems. La Protection Del Medio Ambiente, the Spanish edition of environmental sciences and engineering Prof. Emit Chanlett's Environmental Protection, has been published recently in Madrid by the Instituto de Estudios de Adrninstracion Local. This follows an international student edition published in 1975 in Tokyo by McGraw Hill Kogakusha Ltd. All the North Carolina laws affecting the mentally ill, the mentally retarded and other mentally disabled persons can be found in a new book by H. Rutherford Turnbull, associate professor in the Institute of Government. Explaining the law in language that nonlawyers will understand, The Law and the Mentally Handicapped in North Carolina covers such matters as the application of "consent" to the mentally handicapped, right to education, access to public records and meetings, voluntary admission to institutions, grounds -for committment, rights of liberty and treatment, guardianship, family rights, medical treatment, protection of human subjects, employment, voting rights, tax considerations, driver's license, group homes and insurance. Publication funds for the book were provided by the advocacy section of the Office of Children which is making the book available for $3 from its office in the Albemarle Building in Raleigh. Edward G. Holley, dean of the School of Library Science, attended dedication ceremonies renaming the Library of Congress Annex Building, completed in 1939, the Thomas Jefferson Building. Holley, past president of the American Libraries Association (ALA), addressed the Arkansas Library Association annual conference in September on "Libraries and the Political Process: The Past and Future of ALA Involvement." 4 Evelyn Moore, associate professor in the School of Library Science, attended the annual conference of the American Society for Information Science (ASIS) in San Francisco She is president of the Carolinas Chapter of ASIS. Dean Edward Holley, Asst. Dean Margaret Kalp, Prof. Budd Gambee, and Prof. Haynes McMulIen, of the School of Library Science, attended the Library Sistory Seminar V and ceremonies marking the 100th birthday of the American Library Association last week. Holley presented a paper, "Scholars, Gentle Ladies and Entrepreneurs: American Library Leaders, 1876 1976." Thofaas A. Shetley, general manager of the Student Stores, met in New York City on Sept. 27 and 28 as a member of the Merchandising Committee of the National Association of College Stores. Charles A. Janewiy, internationally renowned pediatrician and immunologist, has been named the 1976 Merrimon Lecturer at the School of Medicine. Janeway, the Thomas Morgan Rotch Professor of Pediatrics Emeritus at Harvard University, will deliver the ninth Merrimon Lecture, "Vision and Reality: Medicine Faces our Third Century," at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 13, in 103 Berry hill Hall. "V
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 11, 1976, edition 1
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