n mum wt'cw mg i r LI""gifHiMji 'KJJ uijji 1,1 2 The Daily Tar Heel Monday. January 17. 1977 1 around campt&s Sunlight banks sharply off the shoulder of Silent Sam, the McCorkle Place statute of a Confederate soldier. The monument memorializes the 321 alumni of the University who died in the War Between the States, as well as the 1,062 who entered the Confederate Army. The sun has risen more than 23,000 times over Silent Sam, who is in full battle uniform but lacks a cartridge box. campus calendar Public service announcements must be turned in to the box Union by 3:30 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item Activities Today ACBL sanctioned bridge tournaments resume at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in Room 207 of the Carolina Union. All bridge players, regardless of ability or experience are welcome. 50c for UNC students; 75c for all others. The UNCCC Short Course presents "What is a Computer and Why Use ItT at 3 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in 228 Phillips Hall. Also, at 3 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18, there will be a "course on an "Introduction to the UNC Computation Center" in 228 Phillips Hall. K. Barton Osborn, an ex-CIA agent, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in the Great Hall. He will speak on the CIA's role in covert operations in foreign countries and show the film "The Rise and Fall of the CIA." Admission is free. Sponsored by the Carolina Union Current Affairs Committee. Hinton James is holding a reception for Bart Osborne immediately following his speech Monday, Jan. 17, in the James first floor lounge. Refreshments will be served. All are invited to attend. Delta Sigma Pi will meet at 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in T-l New Carroll Hall. The Undergraduate History Association will meet at 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in 423 Hamilton HalL Please attend this important meeting as activities for the spring will be planned. The Astronomy Club's first meeting of the year is at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in 247 Phillips Hall. Everyone is invited to attend. The NCSL Executive Reform Bill Committee will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in 452 Hamilton Hall. Rought drafts of the bill will be discussed, so attendance is imperative. ' Sex movies! Preview and discussion of four gay sex education movies at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in Room 215 of the Carolina Union. All are invited to attend and share in discussion. j Moye W. Freymann of the Department of Health Administration will speak on "Population Policy and India" at noon Monday, Jan. 17, in 207 Hamilton Hall. Tour of the Soviet Union and eastern Europe May 24 through July 28, escorted by David MacKenzie of UNC-Greensboro will cost $1,450, all expenses exclusive of independent travel. Contact Dr. MacKenzie at (919) 379-5709 (office) or 275-1229 (home) or attend the meeting at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, in Room 213 of the Carolina Union. Upcoming Events Botany 96 students working with Willie Koch will meet at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18, in 309 Coker Hall. E AFTER The Old Book Corner 137 A EAST ROSEMARY STREET OPPOSITE NCNB PLAZA CHAPEL HILL, N. C. 275 14 THE 0J PL 'if 1 'ii Family Restaurant 3311 Guess Rd., Durham Two blocks left off 1-85 Family-Style Dinner: (We request that everyone at table order - tea or coffee included, other, beverages extra) Dinner includes: Barbeque - Brunswick Stew - Fried Chicken - Cole Slaw -Potatoes - Green Peas or Beans Bring, This Ad and Get 50P Off Above Price! Offer Good Thru Feb. 28, 1977. si Compiled by outside the 'DTK offices in the . will run at least twice. Ten ley Ayers YOGA offers its first yoga class of 1977 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18, in Room 213 of the Carolina Union. Wear loose, comfortable clothing. Everyone is welcome. Alpha Phi Omega Service Fraternity announces its Spring Formal Rush. Men, women, Greeks and non-Greeks are all invited to participate. There will be a meeting of the UNC Table Tennis Club at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18, in the women's gym. This semester's schedule will be announced and ladder play will begin. All members and anyone interested please attend. The Walk for Humanity will be planned at an open organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18, in the YM-YWCA Building. The UNC Young Democrats will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18, in Room 207 of the Carolina Union. Free beer will be provided for the first meeting of the semester. Alpha Epsilon Delta, the premedical and predental society, will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18, in 103 Berryhill Hall. The program will be entitled "How to Pay for Medical or Dental School." Items of Interest Orange County Tax Listings: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to noon Saturday in the Carrboro Town Hall, W. Main St. Students must list by Jan. 31. If unable to go in person, write for a form to: County Tax Office, Hillsborough, N.C. 27278. The APO Spring Book Co-op is no longer accepting books. Sales will continue until Jan. 19 in Rooms 202 and 204 of the Carolina Union from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily except Sunday. The Carolina Union Information Desk is now accpeting names for both babysitting and typing referral services. If you are interested, please leave your name and number at the information desk. The Media Board will meet Tuesday at 3:30 in the Frank Porter Graham Lounge of the Carolina Union. The new chairman requests all members to attend. Juniors and seniors who are NC residents can apply for the 1977 Institute of Government Summer Intern Program in which students work with top state officials in Raleigh. The application deadline is Feb. I. For more information, contact Donald Hayman, Institute of Government, UNC CH, 933-1303. Beginning Jan. 17, the University Counseling Service (Guidance' and Testing Center, Nash Hall) will be open again from 7 to 10 p.m. M onday BEFORE SALE THIS WEEK ACORN All You Can Eat $3.50 per person If : : LAJ evenings. Call 933-2 1 75 for appointments, or drop by the Educational Occupational Information Library for browsing. Students who did not have their portraits taken last semester for the 1977 Yackety Yack, will get a chance during the first two weeks. in February. Appointments will be made from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. all next week near the Union desk and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. all next week at the Y-court. Bowling Leagues are now forming at the Carolina Union Bowling lanes for all types of bowlers, including beginners. Call 933-4131 or come by and sign up. All students interested in volunteer work at N.C. Memorial Hospital are required to sign up from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, Jan. 17 and 18, in Room 106, first floor of the hospital in the Volunteer Office. If you have questions call 966-3136. Auditions for the UNC Wind Ensemble are now being held. Especially heeded are oboe, euphonium, tuba and string bass. Non-music majors; are welcome. For more information.contact David Reed in 109 Hill Hall, 933-2270. Lassifter Continued from page 1 Lassiter also supports increased appropriations to club sports. He admitted that this and other projects would demand additional funds, and he called for a student fee increase. Lassiter denied the existence of limitations on the office of Student Body president, claiming past failures on the limited approach of past presidents and his current opponents. "I don't think there are any limitations if the Student Body president can inspire and attract talented people," he said. He said he is running for the office because of an obligation to the University to make it a better place. "I'm not trying to get into law school; I want to go to med school." he said, denying selfish motivations. ave 10 Coupon ennis Gym Shoes! Converse r j On All Converse & ProKed Shoes Good B Dr. Golden Loretta Golden, head of the Kindergarten First Grade Program at the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Center, died Friday, Jan. 7, at N.C. Memorial Hospital following a stroke. Golden, 47, had been a Chapel Hill resident since joining the center staff in 1970. The following faculty members will be on leaves of absence during the upcoming year: Christopher Armitage, associate professor of English, from Jan. 9 to May 15, 1977; Stephen B. Baxter, Kenan Professor of history, from Aug. 17, 1977 to May 14, 1978; Kenneth I. Gross, associate professor of mathematics, from Jan. 9 to May 15, 1 977; Ross D. Hail, assistant professor of German and linguistics, from Jan. 9 to May 15, 1977, and John B. Turner, Kenan Professor of social work, from Jan. 15 to May" 15, 1977. Anthony J. McMichael, assistant professor of epidemiology, School of Public Health, and Peter O'Connor, assistant professor of education, have resigned to return to their native Australia. Tom S. Miya became the seventh dean of the School of Pharmacy on Jan. 1. He succeeds the late Dean Seymour M. Blaug. The School of Business Administration has received a gift of $16,667 in endowment funds from North Carolina National Bank (NCNB). The gift is part of a $100,000 pledge by NCNB to the Business School's Program for the 70s endowment campaign. rvoir Studies have been reactivated to consider increasing the capacity of University Lake to supplement Chapel Hill's water supply, even though Cane Creek was chosen by the Orange Water and Sewer Authority (OWASA) as the site for construction of a secondary water source. "OWASA is reevaluating its choice of Cane Creek as a (secondary water) site. It's reevaluating the University Lake data and updating it, and at the same time it's proceeding with its work on Cane Creek as rapidly as various factors permit," William Billingsley, OWASA director, said. He explained the OWASA is reactivating the University Lake studies at the request of the Cane Creek Conservation Authority (CCCA), a group of the area's residents opposed to the Cane Creek project. Cane Creek was designated by the OWASA last September as the most desirable site for construction of the area's secondary water supply as the result of studies begun in 1968 by UNC when Chapel Hill had a water shortage similar to the one this fall. University Lake was included in the studies. The studies were suspended in 1971 when the University agreed to sell its utilities. OWASA was created in J une 1 976 to buy the utilities and asked UNC to reactivate its study on Cane Creek. The utilities were scheduled to be sold Jan. 6, but because of delays in arranging the sale with All on eisure ri there's more in COUPON Until January 31, Reso L L ProKeds succumbs H. Rutherford Turnbull of the Institute of Government faculty is serving as chairperson of the legislative and social issues committee of the American Association on Mental Deficiency, the largest professional organization in the country concerned with mental retardation. Cleanth Brooks, Gray ptofessor of rhetoric emeritus at Yale University and internationally known literary critic and scholar, has joined the English department as a visiting professor during the spring semester. He is offering a graduate undergraduate lecture course in 20th-century-British and American literature and a graduate seminar in the writings of William Faulkner. An essay on T.S. Eliot, Anthropologist and Primitive, by William Harmon, associate OSS Other ideas Moss said he will work toward include the instituting of a student news bureau for campus organizations, a campus flea market and a fall break. Moss recognized many limitations in the office of Student Body president, such" as limited time, money 'and scope of responsibilities delegated by the administration. Yet, he said the office's ruckus resumes of $4.75 million in revenue bonds, the sale was postponed until Feb. 15. According to Wayne Abernathy, one of two Graham attorneys contracted by the CCCA to study both the impact the proposed dam and reservoir woukThave on the Cane Creek area and the alternatives to Cane Creek, raising University Lake's dam by 22 feet would result in a potential water supply equivalent to that which would be -provided by the Cane Creek project. However, Abernathy conceded that even though alternatives to Cane Creek are being considered, "If, on the basis of cost and water acquisition Cane Creek is (determined by OWASA) as the best site, then that's what has to be done." In an attempt to resolve the opposition by the area's residents that the Cane Creek project has raised, representatives from OWASA, the Orange County Board of Commissioners and the CCCA have formed a joint task force. "We have been meeting and discussing mutual problems relating to Cane Creek and the need for a water supply (for Chapel Hill). H opefully we will come to a solution to these problems acceptable to both parties," Billingsley, a member, said. Billingsley said that the field survey work will continue on Cane Creek. Although most of the residents have allowed the surveyors on their lands, he said, OWASA, by state tatute, has the right to eminent domain and the "ON CAMPUS' i I 1 1 B B 1977. after stroke professor and chairperson of the department of English, appears in the December issue of The American Anthropologist. Harmon demonstrates the complex uses of cultural anthropological research that the poet Eliot made in his major work. " Washington I rving's Astoria, edited by Richard D. Rust of the English department, has just been brought out by Twayne Publishers of Boston, Mass., as the first in their series, The Complete Works of Washington Irving. "Astoria, or Anecdotes of an Enterprise beyond the Rocky Mountains" is a history of John Jacob Astor's attempt to found a fur trading empire in the drainage area of the Columbia River in the years 1810-13 Continued from page 1 potential outweighs its limitations. "There are many unexplored avenues," he said. Moss said ther were several reasons affecting his decision to enter the race. "To say that ego had nothing to do with it would be patently ludicrous," he said. He also attributed his motivation to a desire to see a real change in SG and to a confidence in his abilities to bring such a change. - (condemnation) of any land designated as necessary for construction of the project. OWASA is also preparing environmental impact reports on both Cane Creek and University Lake which must be submitted to the Army Corps of Engineers before any construction can begin. No construction date has been set, Billingsley said. PRESTWICK MUSIC announce new hours: Monday through Friday 10:00-5:00. Used rock, Jazz, Mum albums, 45's-sell, buy, trad. 105 N. Columbia St (above Big Walfys). 929-7205 Meal Ticket lor sale: 5-day 1 5 meal plan for second semester at a tremendous savings! Only $300. Can 933-6516 after 2 p.m. 1 For sale-luteal plan, two meals, five days; 110-lb. barbell and bench set; Sears cassette. Call 933-8853 after 7 p.m. Ask for Tim. j 1963 Chevrolet Nova S.S. Convertible. 68,000 miles. Red with black interior and top. Automatic on floor. Best offer. 929 1241 between 6 A 10 pjn. ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands on file. Send $1.00 for your 192-page, mail order catalog. 11322 Idaho Ave.. 206H, Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 (213) 477-8474. Granville East Contract for Sale for this semester. $75.00 dis . count CaH 933-1873. Ask for Rita. - " ;.:::r:r.:r 'v rr- rr-yjr : j $10 FREE to anyone knowing the whereabouts of a guy . wishing to purchase a REDUCED THorrlsorfsecoftd floor ! room contract! Contact Glenn at 933-3249 or come by 228 Morrison. Single room, Winston Dorm, $215. Can 942-2955. Keep try ing. Earn $80 weekly at home spare time addressing envelopes. In formation: Rush 25 and stamped self-addressed envelope to: Smith, Bos 170 A, Red Oak, Va. 23964. SUMMER JOBS: Over 200,000 in afl 50 state Your money back If you dont obtain yours thru our comprehensive catalogue. Send $2 to: SUMCHOICE Box 645, State College, Pa. 16801. Act now for best selection. LEARN TAEKWONDO Korean Karate for sport, art or defense. Other stylists welcome. 7:30 MWF. James Dorm lounge. Classes begin Jan. 17. First lesson free. IMMIGRATION INFORMATION. Brochure designed to assist professional person to prepare and file Immigration Petition for permanent residence In U.S. Written by former U.S. Immigration Official. Send $6.50 to T.P. Holahan, P.O. Box 3817, Ft Pierce, Florida 33450. Lost-Black leather key case, containing three or four keys. If found, please call 933-8652. REWARDI Want to buy copy of album "Mary" by Mary Travers (now out of print). 929-6588 nights until 11. SINGLES ONLY! If you're looking for an interesting fun alter native to meeting and dating others in the Triangle Area, why not consider HESHE? We're a very personal non computerized, Inexpensive, and unconventional dating ser vice for men and women of all ages. Discretion, Integrity and confidentiality are our by words. And your social satisfaction is our goal. Interested? Your S.S.A.E. and this ad gets our brochure and application. Go ahead. Indulge your curiosity. Write us. We like to respond. HESHE, Box 1109, Chapel HUI, N.C. 27514. SPRING BREAK FLAVIA CRUISE Spend Spring Break aboard the fun ship Fiavia March 7 to 1 1 , 1977. For further information call your Campus Rep or Circle Tours, University Square, Chapel Hill 942-4196. Volunteers wishing to evaluate new medication for menstrual cramps please can the office of James R. Dlngfetder M.O. at 966-2333 between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 pjn. weekdays for more details. Burlington-Graham residents: Campus employee working 8.-30 ajn. to 4:30 p.m. wants to carpool with students or employees with same hours. Call June at 933-1056 or 228 7483 after 6 p m. The Daily Tar Heel is published by the University of North Carolina Media Board; daily except Sunday, exam periods, vacations, and summer sessions. The following dates are to be the only Saturday issues: September 18. Oct. 16. Oct 23. Nov. 13. Nov. 20. Offices are at the Student Union Building. University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill. N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: News. Sports 933 0245. 933-0246. Business. Circulation. Advertising. -933-1163. Subscription rates: $25 per year. $12.50 per semester. The Campus Governing Council shall have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate aU revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1. 1.4ot the Student Constitution). The Dairy Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of aH advertisements and to revise or turn away copy it considers objectionable. The Daily Tar Heel will not consider adjustments or payments for any typographical errors or erroneous insertion unless notice is given to the Business Manager within (a) one day after the advertisement appears, within (1) day of receiving the tear sheets or subscription of the paper. The Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduled to run several times. Notice for such correction must be given before the next Insertion. Verna Taylor Bustness Mgr. . I