camptas calendar Public wrvice 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 Tournament is at 7.30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 14, in Room 207 of the Carolina Union. All bridge players are welcome. UNC students, 50c; all others, 75c. The UNC Sailing Club meeting scheduled for 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 14, in Room 213 of the Carolina Union is canceled. If anyone needs information about the Spring break cruise to the Bahamas, call Gayle at 929-5626. The UNC Astronomy Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 14, in the faculty lounge of the Morehead Planetarium. D.W. Loyeland of Duke University will speak on "Automatic Theorem Proving: A Problem Proving to be Tough" at 3:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 14, in 224 Phillips Hall. The NCSL Executive Reform Bill Committee (Po!i Scl 95-3) will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 14, in 452 Hamilton Hall. The IRSS Short Course on "Statistical Analysis System, Session 3" will be at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 14, in 307 Manning HalL Timothy Leary Reception at 10p.m. Monday, Feb. 14, in Morrison Social lounge. Sign-ups for the reception are at the Union Desk and Morrison Information Desk. Admission cost for the speech is SI. boooooooooooooooooooooooo 2 Boulevard ADULT BOOK STORE O O O Q Movie Theatre Mini Movies q O Massage with All Girl Staff Q O Now Playing: "The Russians are Coming" and "Love-Office Style"0 0 Rated X Shows Daily From 12 O'Clock . O 0 Open from 10 a.m. until 2 a.m.; Sunday 1 p.m. until 2 a.m. 0 O- Located on Chapel HiD Blvd. ( Beside Main Event Disco w Oooooooooooooooooooooooo o Due to the Energy Crisis Golden West Announces New Temporary Hours Monday thru Thursday Open 6:30 a.m. Til 7 7 p.m. Open Friday 6:30 a.m. Continuously Unlil Sunday 70 p.m. Still Serving Our Complete Menu .art J 5TCAXXS 104 Estes Dr. . .... PH. 929-1230 We Look Forward To Resuming Our THE Daily Crossword ACROSS Celebration Certain 19 Love's agent 20 Double crossed 22 Certain birds 24 Persons 25 Kind of rubber 26 Return, as money 29 Large bag 33 Revolted 1 5 Europeans 10 Relative pronoun Styptic 14 15 Understood, but not spoken 16 Bridle part 17 Nevada city 18 Licorice flavor 46 Of planes I aIoIoIs ffDAlRTs flM AlTlTl 47 Smooth, in b a J.X II oa T i.c.i.1 music LLH.LLLLLlL!i 50 Butchers' l I e t XRE.D.Jc,A.il EjjJ : tools HiFilF 0 u re r l e riarsniy r 0 s Ie Aiiis tIaoi ' v'vid "III s I R a T..E.D 57 Neighbor of 0 f right s To elRtsj Huron - - n 0 R lead .l 58 Singer JmTo J1R 2.L2.2.LI LUL Jerry fa r e" 1m.ag.e e.la,n. 59 In unison 1 0 1 n I e I r I 1 1 n 1 d 1JS.11 60 Formal act I r If I g Is LJI r a s Ie i-JjAjj,Jij q Puts in 1 1 2 1 3 IV T 5 16 17 IB 19 f 110 111112 113 m T5 ' 77 TB ; "i9 To" T TTH I 1 -7T 25 26 2 7"p8 "73 30 131 D2 jr- IT IT J9 To ' TT 1T2 TT "XT ' XT TT" " Xi UslT? 50 5' 1 52 p 3 ft '55-5T 7 " "5T & "To r 1977 by Chicago Tribune-N.Y. News Synd. All Rights Reserved - 'Compiled by outside the "DTH' offices in the , will run at least twice. Ten ley Ayers Upcoming Events Latin American Studies Lecture: Gustavo Andrade, S.J., of Sophia University, Tokyo, will speak on "Japan and Latin America" at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. J 5, in Room 217 of the Carolina Union. The Departments of Statistics and Biostatics present Oscar Kempthorne of Iowa State University, to speak at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 15, in 201 Coker Hall ori the topic "Heredity and IQ: An Example of the Perils of Observational . Studies." At 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 16, in the School of Public Health Auditorium, he will speak on "The Mixed Linear Model and Components of Variance." Congratulations to the N.C. House for their decision on ERA! N ow for the N.C. Senate: we've still got work to do. The ERA Committee of AWS will hold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 15, in Suite D of the Carolina Union. All interested persons please attend. "Environmental Careers" will be the topic of an informal career seminar sponsored by the Career Planning and Placement office at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 15. in 210 Hanes Hall. t -.. There will be a meeting of the Carolina Forum at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 15, in the Frank Porter Graham lounge. All are invited to come. Introductory lectures on the Transcendental Meditation program: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 15. L. 4 , V U 6 Full Schedule in the Near Future by Alice O. Vaughan 34 Beach stuff 35 Berg 36 Humble one 37 Works at 38 Fairy-tale villain 39 Rim 40 Particles 41 Interlace 42 Flee jail again 44 No more, 45 All there 62 Darned 63 Look over OOWN 1 Attire 2 Nautical term 3 Theater name 4 St. Valen-' . tine's Day communiques 5 Remained 6 Paths 7 Sour 8 Power: Lat. 9 Ship men 10 Feb. 14th 11 Tortoise's rival 12 God of love 13 Trueheart 21 Jo - Wortey 23 Timetable abbr. 25 Glass sheets 26 Less re fined 27 Disinte grate 28 Illegally sign a name 29 "The -Mutiny" 30 One-cell plants 31 Nocturnal lemur 32 Eng. city 34 Declivity 37 Musical instruments 41 Adriatic wind 43 Grimalkin 44 Required 46 Straighten out 47 Etnean output 48 Drat! 49 Digger or brick 50 Boast 51 Portmanof films 52 Moreno or Gam 53 Observed 56 Put to work Inc. 2H77 at the Chapel Hill Public Library, and 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 16, at the Carolina Union. Student Government staff meeting All staff members and interested persons please attend. All persons interested in reopening the Quarry north of Pittsboro come to the organizational meeting at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 15. in the South Gallery Meeting Room of the Carolina Union. The Curriculum in Peace, War and Defense will present "The Sorrow and the Pity" from 4 to 6 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 15, in 100 Hamilton Hall. Free. Items of Interest Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) April 30. $35. Applications need to be postmarked by April 4. Applications have arrived in Predent Prcmed Advising Office. 311 South Building and in 101 Nash Hall. Applications for the Class of 1938 Fellowships for Summer Study Abroad ($500) are available in the International Student Center in the Basement of Bynum Hall. Juniors only. The Student Consumer Action Union needs your help now with a variety of interesting projects. Committee members are needed immediately. Please come by Suite B in the Carolina Union in the afternoon for more details. Get involved with Orientation! Applications for Freshmen and Transfer counselors, Tar Drug study grant awarded by Jeff Cohen Staff Writer Five UNC School of Medicine faculty members recently received a $244,000 grant to study the long term effects of drugs being used to help control the disruptive behavior of children with mental disorders. The grant, from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, will be used to cover expenses for the first year of the five-year study. Similar awards are expected for each of the study's succeeding four years. The researchers. Dr. George R. Breese. Department of Psychiatry and Pharmacology; Drs. Robert Mueller and Stephen Riser. Department of Pharmacology, and Drs. Paul Mushak and Martin Krigman. Department of Pathology, are members of the Biological Sciences Research Center of the Child Development Institute at UNC. "We know that drugs are very useful in moderating the behavior of children who are violent or otherwise uncontrollable." Breese said. "What we don't know is whether these drugs may Contact Applications available Feb. .rrjff f Heel Days counselors and Operations Personnel are available at the Union desk. Any formal or informal group of students wishing to be remembered for time immemorial can do 'so by being represented in the 1977 Yackety Yack. The cost of a page is $60. Interested students should inquire any weekday afternoon in the Yack office. Suite D, of the Carolina Union. The Yackety Yack will soon be accepting applications for next year's editor and business manager. Interested persons should submit their applications and resumes to George Bacso in Suite C of the Carolina Union any weekday afternoon. The College Quiz Bowl is coming. Sign-up at the U nion desk for the intercollegiate-intramural competition. Rules and explanations will be posted in the Carolina Union. Anyone interested in doing volunteer work at an area nursing home please stop by the campus YMCA for further information. Anyone interested in working oncampusbeer sales should contact Bill Gillikin in Suite C or at 933-4001. Still lost on campus? Learn your way around by taking the historical campus tours leaving at noon. Monday through Saturday, and 3 p.m. Sunday, from the west wing of the "Morehead Planetarium. Get your tickets for the Annual Pancake Day. from any Kiwanis Club member. The Pancake Day w ill be from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday. Feb. 19. at ten University United Methodist Church. Adults $1.50. Children. $1. be harmful in the long run." Breese said that the investigation will focus on psychoactive drugs most commonly used to treat mentally retarded, autistic or hyperkinetic children. The researchers experiments with the long term effects of these drugs will be performed on both rats and monkeys. The second part of the research, for which federal funds are being .sought, will include a careful evaluation of children already receiving drug therapy. "We may find that the drugs have no adverse effects and that we should keep using them." Breese said. "Or we may discover new therapeutic agents or better approaches to behavior modification." Although symptoms can be treated, there are no cures for developmental disorders such as autism and hyperkinesis. "What we're after is a happy medium between hav ing children who are disruptive and dangerous to themselves and others, and children, who by overdosage, are kept in a chemical straitjacket." Breese explained. Orientation Wants YOU! Apply for: Freshman and Transfer Counselors Tarheel Days Operations 14 from R.A.s and Union desk. h liT Mbsrn &i r:hm jf HcnojiBSyHTe y cBoe 3HaHne V HHOCTpaHHOro J V fit i y v y Jjw Udall, Colby to be featured in foreign policy colloquium by Jaci Hughes Staff Writer Former CIA Director William Colby and Rep. Morris Udall will speak at. UNC this semester as part of the 1977 Colloquium on International Affairs. The colloquium, entitled "America's Emerging Role in an Uncertain World," is designed to "help students to think critically about those issues which are important to the vitality and identity of our nation," Nick Herman, co-chairperson of the colloquium, said. Herman and Bert vander Vaart. a Rhodes scholar, began planning the colloquium in the fall of 1975. Topics are divided into two areas: foreign policy regions and foreign policy issues. Panelists will address the political, econcomic and military questions in the Middle East. Latin America and Japan in the foreign policy regions segment of the colloquium. u '-J Morris Udall William Colby 1977 COLLOQUIUM ON TOPIC SPEAKER DATE & TIME PLACE International Law Panel 2 14. 15, 16 Union 202-04 (tentative date) Economic Policy .laroslav Vanek. 2 17; 2-5 p.m. Morehead Fact & East-West Trade Laura Tyson & Egon Neuberger Fffects ol Domestic Morris Udall 2 21:8 p.m. Memorial Hall Structure on Foreign Policy U.S.-Asian Policy Panel:, the 2 28; 4 p.m. Union 202-04 Pacific Basin U.S. -China R. Rupen 2 28; 4 p.m. Union 202-204 Economic Policy Frank Holtman 3 2; 8 p.m. Great Hall & East-West Trade The African Panel: Southern 3 15; 4 p.m. Union 202-04 Continent Africa Oil Politics Panel: OPEC and 3 16; 4 p.m. Union 202-04 Oil Politics (tentative date) Latin America Panel " 3 22; 4 p.m. Union 202-04 Multinationals George B. Monroe 3 24; 8 p.m. 100 Hamilton The Middle East - Panel: Prof. 3 29; 4 p.m. Union 202-04 Bodman and Ambassador Dale Intelligence William Colby 3 30; 8 p.m. Memorial Hall Multinationals Barrv Hager TBA Union 202-04 Europe & NATO Panel: NATO 4 11:4 p.m. Union 202-04 (tentative) (tentative date) Atomic Control Jeff Dumas 4 14; 8 p.m. 100 Great Hall & SALT Third World Ali Marui 4 15; 8 p.m. 100 Hamilton Development U.S. -Soviet Relations Pat Parker 4 21; 8 p.m. 100 Hamilton & Detente International Donald Eraser TBA TBA Human Rights .. , . .. i ties. t:li r f v ,.!1 -.i Monday, February 14, 1977 The Daily Tar Heel 3 Panelists and speakers will discuss "Conceptual World Order and Moral Issues," "U.S. -Soviet Relations and. Detente." "Oil Politics," "Multinationals," "Atomic Control and SALT" "NATO," "International Law," "U.S. -China Relations," and "Carter Foreign Policy;" "Only public awareness of our world situation can lead to a renewed and definitive sense of America's role in global politics," Herman said. Van der Vaart said that the format of the colloquium this year will allow more students to attend the programs. "The colloquium will adopt a new approach by spreading out its program activities throughout the spring semester. Major speakers will be scheduled between two or three week intervals, with panels and minor speakers coming in between major events." he said. "The flexibility of this approach will assure greater ease in scheduling speakers, and most importantly will allow a greater utilization of existing resources and visiting lecturers." Van der Vaart added. Another important feature of the 1977 Colloquium is the unique way in which it is being financed. "What we're doing is cost sharing." Herman said. Herman said that in cost-sharing the colloquium puts up half of the money for a speaker and the other half is supplied by a department at the University that has an interest in that speaker. The program will begin Feb. 17 and will continue through April 21. INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

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