Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 6, 1977, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 The Daily Tar Hael Wednesday, April 6. 1977 Public service announcements must be turned in to the box outside the DT H off xes m the Union by 1 00 p m if they are to run tne nexi aay tacn nem win run ai m.w Compiled by Tenley Ayers Wanted: New Campus Calendar Editor. Must be able to work at least two hours a day, Sunday through Thursday. Pay: $7.50 a week. Interested persons contact Jonl Peters or Tenley Ayers at the DTH, 933-0245 or 933-0246. Activities Today The Department of Chemistry presents David Mauzerall to speak of "Why Chlorophyll at 1 1 a.m. in 308 Venable Hall. A public colloquium on Power Plants: Environmental and Socioeconomic Inpacts will be held from 8 to 10 p.m. in T-6 Carroll Hall. Call 933-3074 for more information. The Coffee Klatch will be from 9 to 1 1 a.m. in the Pine Room. AH faculty and students are invited. Pastries and coffee will be sold. The UNC Readers Theatre will present Ursula K. LeGuin's epic fantasy of light and darkness, A Wizard of Earthsea, at 8 tonight and Thursday, April 7. in Room 213-215 of the Carolina Union. It's free! If you're going to be in Chapel Hill this summer and like to munch out at the local restaurants, why not work on the Franklin Street Gourmet. If you're interested, come to the meeting at 3 p.m. in Room 205 of the Carolina Union. The UNC Outing Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Room 207 of the Carolina Union. Club elections will be held and ice cream will be made. Everyone is welcome. Rugby match: Carolina vs. Courtland State at 3:30 p.m. at Eagle field. Everyone is invited to come and support our team. There will be an AWS meeting at 7 p.m. in Suite D of the Carolina Union. It will not conflict with the Juanita Kreps lecture at 8 p.m. All members must attend. Compete in the Carolina Godiva Track Meet today. Registration begins at 5:45 p.m. at the Fetzer Field. Everyone is welcome. Call 942-2561 or 933-1013 for more information A bird walk will be held at the North Carolina Botanical Garden from 8 a.m. to 1 0 p.m. For more information and to register call 929-1,1 1 1, ext. 210. The Graduate History Society presents Zane Miller speaking on "Ethnicity, Community and the Contemporary Metropolitan Crisis" at 7:30 p.m. in Rooms 202-204 of the Carolina Union. Reception following. The results of the Mature Adult Students Study, conducted on campus this year, will be discussed at 8 p.m. in 100 Hamilton Hall. All students, faculty and administrators are invited to attend the discussion of the growing body of students. The new initiates of the Order of the Grail Valkyries are reminded of the dinner at 6 p.m. at the Cansler residence. 716 Caswell Rd. Please bring dues. Pot-luck. too. The Transcendental Meditation Program: Introductory lectures at 7:30 p.m. Room 204 of the Carolina Union. Everyone is welcome. Have you forgotten your basic biology and zoology? Come to free MCAT and DAT Review Session at 7 p.m. in ' 103 Berryhill Hall. Sponsored by AED. The Undergraduate History Association will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 423 Hamilton Hall. All present and prospective members are urged o attend. There will be a South Campus Charter meeting of the intervarsity Christian-Fellowship at 7:30 p.m. in the Hinton James Coffeehouse. Everyone come! There will be a meeting of the Executive Board of the Graduate and Professional Student Federation at 7:30 p.m. in Room 217 of the Carolina Union. The SATB Horn Quartet will present a free concert at 8 p.m. in 107 Hill Hall. Upcoming Events An informal discussion of basic Baha'i teachings will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. April 7, in the Carolina Union. Check at the main desk for the room number. Everyone is welcome. The Hunger Action Committee will meet at 9 p.m. Thursday. April 7, upstairs in the Y Building. Everyone is welcome to help plan Food Week. Call 942-7202 for further details. Community I. a fellowship of graduate and undergraduate students, invites students to meet from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, April 7. in the Student Center Lounge of University Presbyterian Church for a supper and a 7:30 p.m. Maundy Thursday service. The Chinese Youth Goodwill Mission performs at 7 p.m. Thursday. April 7. in the Great Carter planning to jawbone on inflation WASHINGTON (U PI) -The Carter administration may be planning to "jawbone" both business and labor to head off possible inflation resulting from the severe winter weather, Senate Democratic whip Alan Cranston said Tuesday. After a morning meeting among Democratic congressional leaders, Carter, economic advisor Charles Schultze and budget director Bert Lance, Cranston said there were indications the administration wants to discuss with business and labor any inflation actions they may be planning. But he said there was no "arm twisting" in mind. For its own part, the administration will cope with unexpected economic downturns restricting inflationary government actions such as over-regulation and under enforcement of antitrust laws, the California senator quoted Schultze as saying. Cranston said passing the $50 rebate for most taxpayers, the keystone of Carter's economic stimulus package, will be "a tough fight but, in our view, a winnable fight." Many senators, however, are ready to oppose the rebates unless Carter backs down on his review of certain water projects around the country. And on Capitol Hill, Senate majority leader Robert Byrd told reporters Carter perhaps should abandon the rebate, a battle the President can do without and not one that is winnable... .As of today it would not pass," he said. Asked if it is fair to hold the rebate hostage for the water projects, Byrd replied, "It's a realistic thing. You have to be a realist when you're talking about votes." Stamp plan proposed WASHINGTON (UP1) Poor people would no longer have to shell out cash to get food stamps under the Carter administration reform proposal announced Tuesday by Agricultural Secretary Bob Bergland. The program would make between 2.5 million and 3 million more persons eligible but would cut back benefits to about 7 million, those with incomes at the highest end of the poverty scale. The plan, presented to the House Agricultural Committee, won general praise on Capitol Hill, but it also got a warning about its possible disproportionate effect in high cost-of-living areas and some outright opposition on grounds it would be the start of a "giant guaranteed annual wage." Sadat requests U.S. aid WASHINGTON (UP1) President Anwar Sadat put Egypt's bid for U.S. military aid directly to President Carter and congressional leaders Tuesday, but White House spokesmen said he won no commitments or decisions." White House officials also said Sadat endorsed U.S. opposition to "interference from non-African powers" in African disputes. American criticism in that area has been aimed at the Soviet Union and Cuba, CHARLOTTE AREA: Summer Jobs $4.00 hr. or more Call 535-5877 from 3-5 or write W.E.A.I., 3547 North Sharon Amity, Charlotte, N.C. Interviews - April 8, 9, 11 although the thrust of Sadat's commitment was left vague. The Egyptian President made his pitch for a share of U.S. weapons sales both at the White House and on Capitol Hill in concluding two days of official talks with U.S. leaders. Carter pronounced himself "very pleased" with the "personal friendship" he established with Sadat who leaves Washington Wednesday, and White House press secretary Jody Powell said the two-day visit confirmed the "excellent state of relations" between Egypt and the United States. But, Powell said. Carter agreed only to take Sadat's request for U.S. jet fighters, antitank missiles and cargo planes under consideration and to consult on the matter with Congress. Vance briefs Senate WASHINGTON (UPI Secretary of State Cyrus Vance Tuesday opened a two day effort to persuade Congress that U.S. Soviet arms talks have suffered only a temporary setback and he seemed to be getting some timely help from the Kremlin. Vance was briefing the Senate Foreign Relations Committee late Tuesday on the strategic arms negotiations that ended last Drive Our Cars ALMOST FREE to most U.S. cities AUTO DRIVEAVAY 919-272-2153 520 W. Friendly Ave. Greensboro, N. C. week with Soviet rejection of both major U.S. proposals. He returns to Capitol Hill Wednesday to testify on the same issue before the House International Relations Committee. Vance and President Carter have said repeatedly they do not consider the Soviet rejection as a "breakdown" of arms control efforts. They predict the Soviets will negotiate constructively on a new Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty when talks resume this May in Geneva. In Moscow, Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev said much the same thing in a comment which, while critical of the U.S. position, was far milder than previous Soviet statements on the issue. "It is our program aim to achieve the solution of one of the most important tasks of our times, the task of limiting and ending the arms race, especially the nuclear arms race," Brezhnev said during a dinner toast to visiting Cuban Premier Fidel Castro. BASS SQUEEJUNS for gals in rugged, supple leather on a bouncy, non-skid rubber sole. 30.00 Only one from our new Bass collection. GRI-CpQ 1 1 SHOES University Mall NT n Env.ronmenta.ism will if muddy the job pool? Some people think America will have to spend a trillion dollars by the mid 1980s on more pollution control. Could this hurt your chance of getting a job you want? We hope not but it's a possibility. America simply doesn't have a trillion dollars to spare. Shifting so vast an amount from other uses will disrupt nearly every other national goal. Adding costly environmental equipment doesn't increase industrial production. So once the equipment is in place, the handful of new jobs created for pollution control is more than offset by production jobs that don't appear. Spending large sums on pollution control means companies can't spend that money on something else like new jobs. We're going to need another 18,000,000 jobs in this country by 1985. These days the average job costs $42,168 to create. So a trillion dollars is more than the total current cost of creating 18,000,000 jobs. Even if we had a trillion dollars, America couldn't satisfy its most extreme environmental demands already on the books. Air quality rules now lock important areas of the coun try out of any new industrial develop ment. And water quality standards being applied to all bodies of water, no matter how they're used, will stymie even population growth in many parts oftheU.S. We all want clean air and water. We've been sensitized to pollution's dangers for years. But the fact is: America's air and water have been getting cleaner lately. We've obviously still got a lot to do. But as we do it, we need to study carefully the costs and benefits, to keep environmentalism from tying America up in knots. nN Free Armotfs plain talk on how to get a job We've got a free booklet to help you get a job. Use it to set yourself apart, above the crowd. We answer 50 key questions you'll need to know. Like why you should bone up on companies you like. What to do after the first interview. Hints to make you a more aggressive, attractive job candidate. All prepared for Armco by a consulting firm specializing in business recruiting, with help from the placement staff of a leading university. Send for your free copy of How to Get a Job. Write Armco Steel Corpor ation, Educational Relations Dept., General Offices, 14, Middletown, Ohio 45043. Our supply is limited, so write now. 1) V Plain talk about POLLUTION CONTROL So far, Armco has spent $260,000,000 for pollution control systems. Running that equipment costs us another $26,000,000 a year. We've slashed our air emissions 95. But now we've passed the point of diminishing returns. Cutting into that final 5 can cost more and waste more electrical energy than it took to stop the entire 95. What's worse, generating the electricity to reduce industrial emis sions further often creates more pollution at power plants than industry removes. As a nation, we need to carefully examine environmentalist demands and balance them against their social, as well as economic, consequences. Next time somebody says industry ought to start cleaning up its act, you might like to point out that the clean up is well on its way. The more extra environmental costs pile on, the fewer new jobs there may be. Armco wants vour plain tcik on environmontolisrn end Jobs Does our message make sense? We'd like to know what you think. Your personal experiences. Facts you've found to prove or disprove our point. Drop us a line. We'll send you a more detailed report on the relationship between pollution control and jobs. Our offer of How to Get a Job, above, tells you how to write us. Let us hear from you. We've all got a stake in more American jobs. Hall of the Carolina Union. Chinese folk music, self-defense and dances will be performed. Admission is free. The N.C. Coastal Club presents Ronald Earl Mason to discuss appointment of new fisheries direction and coastal area management at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 7, in Room 202 of the Carolina Union. The public is invited. Items of Interest The Art Department is sponsoring a seven-day bus trip to Baltimore. Philadelphia, Princeton and New York, May 16-23. The price; $124.50, includes transportation and lodging. If interested, call Robert Jackson at 933-7251 before April 6. Anyone interested in helping rewrite SCAU's Guide to Banking Institutions in Chapel Hiil, Ca$h, should contact SCAU in Suite B of the Carolina Union or call 933-8313. Applications for the Lawrence Whitfield Travelling Fellowship are available at Wesley Foundation and Campus Y. The Fellowship is $250 available to any undergraduate with at least one more year, to be used in travel-study. Marching Tar Heels Band will be held at 10 a.m Saturday, April 23, in Carmichael Auditonum If you have any questions, call the UNC Band office or Mary Ann McMahan at 968-9177. Need help with finding materials for your research papers? Sign up for an appointment at the referencTdesk with the Term Paper Clinic in the Undergraduate Library, now through April 22. - ' Summertime Fun! Summertime fun . for Students (preferably married or engaged) desiring future career working with boys age 9-16. Own your own youth business. For details call 703-939-1319 or see the Career Planning and Placement Office. I J 8:30 until 1 1 p.m. Monday thru Saturday 942-5153 Across from Glen Lennox Shopping Center a THE CHANCELLOR'S COMMITTEE ON ESTABLISHED LECTURES of the University of North Carolina cordially invites you to attend the VEIL LECTURE by THE HONORABLE JUANITA M. KREPS Secretory of Commerce on Wednesday, April 6, 1977 - 8:00 p.m. TOPIC: "PRIVATE RIGHTS AND PUBLIC RESPONSIBILITY" in MEMORIAL HALL A public reception in the Old Well Room, Carolina Inn, will follow Secretary Kreps' lecture. Easter special! Place your order now! Large homemade caka shaped like a bunny with big ears and bow tie decorated in a bright colorful fashion M. 00 each. Information and orders by phone: 929-1 543. Can be picked up the Saturday before Easter. Orders should be placed BY TJhursdayApriYjft 1963 Triumph Spitfire: great mileage 4045 mpg, good mechanical condition, perfect car for student living nearby. 150-200. Call 933-8831 anytime. CONTACT LENS WEARERS. Save on your hard and soft lens supplies. Send 13C stamp for price list. Contact Lens Supplies, Box 7453, Phoenix, Arizona 85011. For sale: Yamaha classical guitar, nylon strings. Perfect for the beginner or as a second guitar. Excellent condition. Must see. $50. Call 933-8814. Mothar'VdaY Pcial- Up to 30 off. Exquisite leather handbags, silk scarfs, brass jewelry from India. Call Handicraft House after 5 p.m. and weekends 933 8474. 74 VW for sale, excellent condition. Reasonable price. Day: 933-6981, Night: 489-2746. Ask for Steve. ATO fraternity is renting rooms in the house this summer. 50 for a double, 75 for a single, each session. Call us at 968-9086 or drop by our conveniently located house at 303 E. Franklin St. FoV"rentT"2 rooms in 4 bedroom furnished house opprox. IVj miles from campus on bus route. Option to take over lease on entire house May 1 5. Call Mark at 967-7608 after 6 p.m. VW wanted that requires repair, preferably engine overhaul-. 967-7414 evenings. WRITE FOR FILMS AND TV. Experienced professionals with valuable industry contacts offer-' editorial and marketing aid. DO NOT send manuscripts. WRITE: SCREEN WRITERS SERVICE, 2064 APS. Santa Barbara. Ca. 93103. TV is out of control. VIDEOSMASH will help demythologize your set. Send for brochure co DTH. Carolina Union UNC. Chapel Hill. A free service. IN ST A -COPY, offset printing 8 quick copying while you wait. 100 satisfaction guaranteed. Check our fast service and low price on theses work. INSTA COPY, corner of Franklin & Columbia (over the Zoom), 929-2147. VW GOT THE BLAHS? Major tune-upe 412.60 plus parts. Mufflers S47.50 installed. Clutches, brakes, valve jobs, rebuilds. Tel. The Bug Haue evenings at 967-7414 for appointment. Spring semi-formal: April 16 at 9 p.m. Place: Great Hall. Band: Great American Pastimes. Tickets on sals at Union desk. Price: $3 per person. Classified Ads are easy to usel Just fill out the ad form (available in the Carolina Union) and drop it in campus mail or bring it by the DTH office. Reach over 20,000 people for only 41.50. -"- ..... ...... Emma. Annie, Lizzie, Joe, Smttty, Peter, and Larry The Cup has never been so much fun. I can't wait to do it againt Thank you aft for your friendship. Nancy. Need ride to Washington. D.C. area; wilt pay for gas. Leeve Friday, April 8, return Sunday or Monday. Call Tom Bever. office 549-8167 (9-5. local ). home 942- 2155. Girls Two amateur swingers wish to become pros Need great deal of practice. Any ideas to Improve scoring, call Andy 933-5291 or RpfyA33JSll. Want an AIR-CONDITIONED apartment with SWIMMING POOL for the summer? 2-bedroom apartment with carpeted den. living room and kitchen available May 1 5. Plenty of free parking and a couple of miles from campus. Call 933-2555 933-2556. Lost: Brown leather wallet with "LSD" monogram. Call Anne. 929-8484. Reward. Want an air conditioned room for the summer? Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, 227 E. Rosemary Street, has single and double rooms available for both sessions. kitchen privileges are inciuaea. uaii apg-ajya. Need washer transported from west Raleigh to Glen Lennox. C.H. Will pay. Call Sally. 933-2073, 929-6677. Summer Jobs. Forest Service. How. where, when to apply. 140 National Forests. Complete information 3.00. Mission Mountain Co., Sox 727, Poison. Mont. 69860. Got something to say or sell? Reach over TWENTY THOUSAND PEOPLE for only 41.60 in the DTH classifieds! Europe 77 No frills student-teacher charter flights. Global Travel, 521 Fifth Ave.. New York. N.Y. 10017. (212) 379 3532. Qur 9th year. EuraM fc student rail passes. INTERESTED IN LOW COST JET TRAVEL TO EUROPE AND ISRAEL? STUDENT TRAVEL CENTER can help you trevel with maximum flexibility 8 minimum coat. For more info caU TOLL FREE 800 326-8034. The Daily Tar Heel is published by the University of North Carolina Media Board; daily except Sunday, exam period, vacations, and summer sessions. The following data 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. 9334246; Business. Circulation. Advertising. -933-1163. Subscription semester. rates $25 per year; $12 50 pat The Campus Governing Council shall have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate aH revenue derived from the Student Actrvrt.es Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution). The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of alt advertisement and to revise or turn away copy it considers objectionable The Daily Tar Heat will not consider adjustment or paymenta for any typographical errors or erroneous insertion unless notice is given to the Business Manager within (a) one day after the advertisement appears, within (t) 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 mut b given before the next insertion. Varna Taylor Business Mgr. '
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 6, 1977, edition 1
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