Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 13, 1977, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
2 The Daily Tar Hear Wednesday April 13. 1977 Public service announcements must be turned in to the box outside the DTH offices in the wKv i.uw k f,f " ,w vb; uavn nvin win run a tea si iwtce Compiled by Ten ley Ayers Activities Today The International Affairs Colloquium will present L. Dean Brown, negotiator in Lebanese conflict. He will speak on "Middle East: 1977" at 8 p.m. in 100 Hamilton Hall. The Order of the Old Wall has a general-body meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the South Gallery Meeting Room of the Carolina Union. Everyone is asked to attend. V"" 8tudent Government is having an open-house staff meeting at 3:30 p.m. in Room 202 of the Carolina Union. All persons who turned in applications, as well as any other interested : students are invited to attend. - The Playmaker Repertory Company will hold auditions for dogs to be cast in Once In A Lifetime at noon on the green in front of Graham Memorial Building. Only dogs with a feel for the 1930s art-deco period will be considered. The larger the dog the better. "Wrenches and Screws..." A bike repair workshop from 12 noon to 2 p.m. in the Pit, sponsored by AWS. Come fix it yourself. Twenty dollars in prizes will be awarded to the winner of both the long jump and the 880-yard run in Carolina Godiva's Athletic Attic Track Meet. There will also be a 100-yard dash, 440-yard and 3-mile run and high jump. Registration begins at 5:45 p.m. on Fetzer Field. Call 942-2561 or 933- Players seek dramatic dogs for new show The Playmakers Repertory Company (PRC) is seeking dogs with dramatic talent to appear m their production of George F. Kaufman and Moss Hart's play Once In a Lifetime. The auditions will be held at noon today on the green in front of Graham Memorial Building. The Playmakers want a set of matched dogs to make a cameo appearance in the play, according to Michael Dixon, a PRC member. The dogs should have a feeling for the 1930s art deco period," Dixon said. "We would prefer dogs that are stage trained theatre broken though stage experience is not necessary," he said. "The dogs should walk with a flair and have personality. The bigger the dog the better Russian wolfhounds would be ideal. We will consider cats that look like dogs." Dogs wishing to audition for the part will be required to sit and walk. Denise Ford will cast the parts. Runners-up and understudies will receive prizes. Dogs should have no commitments during the run of the play, April 19-23 and 26-30. CHIP HIGHSMITH 1013 for more details. There will be a joint UNC-Duke colloquium on "X-rays Arising From Ions With Double K Shell Vacancies" featuring Professor Stephen Shafroth at 4 p.m. in 265 Phillips Hall. The UNC Veterans Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 206 of the Carolina Union. We will be making final plans for our booth at the Apple Chill Fair and also discussing our spring feast. All interested veterans are invited. There will be a meeting of the Graduate and Professional Student Federation Senate at 7:30 p.m. in Room 217 of the Carolina Union. there will be an Astronomy Club meeting at 8 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge of the Morehead Planetarium. Dr. M. S. Davis will speak. ECKANKAR, The Path of Total Awareness, will hold an open discussion group at 7:30 p.m. in 522 Hamilton Hall. All interested persons are invited. There will be an Outing Club meeting at 7 p.m. in Room 209 of the Carolina Union. Everyone welcome! Free films. Wilderness Alps and Ski the Outer Limits, will be shown at 9 p.m. in Mangum Dorm basement The Coffee Klatch will be held from 9-1 1 a.m. in the Pine Room. Faculty and students are invited. Coffee and pastries will be sold. The UNC Individual Events Speech Team will hold another mini-festival this afternoon in the Pit. Stop by and hear poetry and prose reading, duo interpretation and original speaking events, St. John's Metropolitan Community Church will meet for regular Bible study at 8 p.m. in. Raleigh. For more information or transportation, call 929-8843 or 967-9626. All are welcome. Are you ready for the MCAT or DAT? Come to the Math Review sponsored by Alpha Epsilon Delta at 7 p.m. in 103 Berryhill Hall. The Science-Fiction and Fantasy Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 209 of Alumni Building. All interested persons are invited. Members of the UNC Chapter of Psi Chi will be available to help with preregistration from I to 4 p.m. in Davie Hall lobby. There will be a meeting at 3 p.m. in Room 205 of the Carolina Union for anyone interested in working on the Franklin Street Gourmet, SCAU's local restaurant survey. Pr. Arthur Cooper of the Coastal Resources Commission will discuss the Coastal Area Management Act and the need for public input at 7:30 p.m. in Room 202 of the Carolina Union. Sponsored by the N.C. Coastal Club. Come hear "What Socialists Stand For" at 12 noon in Room 213 of the Carolina Union. Upcoming Events Jeff Dumas, Columbia University professor, will speak at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in the Great Hall of the Carolina Union. He will discuss nuclear weapons and their role in international security. The Medical Technology Club will present Carol Stevens who will show slides of her year in Ethiopia as a Peace Corps volunteer at 7 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in Room 206 of the Carolina Union. Everyone is, invited id attend. : The School f.tductiidnwjll:''hQid pre registration advisement sessions for alt undergraduate education majors from 4 to 6 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in Peabody Hall. Students should check the notices posted in Peabody for location of these meetings. Roy Thompson, columnist for the Winston Salem Journal, will speak at 7 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in Room 203 in Howell Hall. Reception following in Room 204 Howell. Members of the Society of Professional Journalists please meet at 6:45 p.m. to elect officers. Professor Shlomo Aronson. Director of the Center" for European Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem will speak at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in Room 213-215 of the Carolina Union. The topic of the lecture will be "Peace in the Middle East, the Arms Race, and Nuclear Weapons." The lecture will be sponsored by the Curriculum in Peace, War, and Defense. The UNC Jugglers Association will meet from 4 to 5 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in the Arboretum (nice weather) or in the Tin Can (bad weather). All persons are welcome, especially beginners. For information, call 967-4153. The UNC Advertising Club will present the CLIO Films at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in Room I-A Swain Hall. These films are the award winning commercials for 1976. Everyone is invited. All members of the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies are required to attend this week's meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in Room 300 in New West Hall. Elections will be held for next semester's officers. Proxies are not valid for elections. The Christian Science Organization will meet at 5: 15 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in the South Gallery Meeting Room of the Carolina Union. .This week's topic js "Your True Self." All are welcome. "World Peace: What the Baha'i faith is Doing" will be the subject of an informal discussion sponsored by the UNC Baha'i Club at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 14 in Room 205 of the Carolina Union. Everyone is welcome. Come see the Skydivers at the Campus Carnival at 6 p.m. Thursday, April 14 at Ehringhaus Field. Anyone interested in joining the Parachute Club, call 929-2315. Rep. H. M- Michaux D-Durham will speak at the annual meeting of the American Civil Liberties Union at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, April 14 at the Community Church on Purefov Road. The concert by the UNC Schola Cantorum originally scheduled for 8 p.m." Thursday, April 14 has been cancelled. Members of Psi Chi will be available to help with preregistration from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. in the lobby of Davie Hall Thursday, April 14. Items of Interest Sweet Caroline applications are now available in the Sports Information Office in Carmichael Auditorium until April 15. Anyone interested in helpingto rewrite SCAU's guide to banking institutions in Chapel Hill should contact the SCAU office in Suite B of the Carolina Union or call 933-8313. The Carolina Course Review is now available in the Wilson and House libraries and at the Union Applications are available for the Lawrence Whitfield Travelling FeHowshlp at the Wesley Foundation and the campus YM-YWCA. A grant of $250 is available for returning undergraduates for travel and study this summer. Return applications to the Wesley Foundation on April Student Buying Power Cards for off campus, fraternity and sorority students and faculty are available at the information desk in the Carolina Union These cards provide discounts at participating merchants in the Chapel Hill- Carrboro area. Concerned? Contact the Human Sexuality Information and Counseling Service fox questions about interpersonal relationships, contraception, pregnancy, homosexuality, venereal disease and other personal matters. Professional referrals, group speakers. Suite B, Carolina Union. Telephone: 933-5505. 24 hour service. Need help with finding materials for your research paper? Sign up for an appointment at the reference desk in the Undergraduate Library wth the Term Paper Clinic, now through April 22. Fun Day, sponsored by the Student Council for Exceptional Children, will be held Saturday, April 30. It is a day of fun and games for handicapped as well as nonhandicapped children. If you are interested in participating, please call 933-6157 or drop a note to Fun Day-SCEC, Dept. of Special Education, Peabody Hall, Campus. Applications will be accepted through Friday, April 15. "Travel and Discovery" an exhibit by the Rare Book Room and the Friends of the Library, featuring rare books, maps and manuscripts from the Library's special collections. Five hundred years of cartography, travel and exploration in all parts of the world will be represented. April 13 through May 2 at Morehead Planetarium Rotunda. -j in mm im in niiiniiiimimimin mil jiiiihi m i I mi mi mil m ni bfeJJf - cfe-Jill I - & ?r Carter, Soviet ambassador meet WASHINGTON (UPI) President Carter and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin had a "constructive and useful discussion" of strategic arms limitation Tuesday while touching briefly on American seizure of Soviet fishing vessels, the White House reported. A smiling Dobrynin, leaving the Oval Office after 40 minutes with Carter, said it was "a good meeting." Responding to a question, he said he did not bring a message from Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev. "There was a constructive and useful discussion of U.S.-Soviet relations which included strategic arms "limitations," said Jerry Schecter, a White House press aide. 'They also discussed briefly the question of Soviet fishing violations inside the 200-mile limit." Roberts files appeal GREENSBORO (UPI) Bobby Roberts, a Durham developer convicted with four other persons of misapplying savings and loan association funds, has given notice of appeal. The U.S. District Court clerk's office received notice Monday of Roberts' intention to appeal to the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Best liquor is made from horse feed Staff photos by Allen Jernigan Two of these campus dogs just might land a role in the Playmaker Repertory Company's production, "Once in a Lifetime." Auditions are at noon. Dogs who walk with a swagger and have a feel for the 1930s art deco period are preferred. Bro wn to participate in colloquium L. Dean Brown, U.S. negotiator in the 1976 Lebanese conflict, will speak at 8 p.m. today in 100 Hamilton Hall on "Middle East: 1977." Brown's speech is part of the 1977 International Affairs Colloquium. Brown was ambassador to Senegal and Gambia from 1967 until 1970, when he became ambassador to Jordan. Brown returned to Washington in 1973 to become a deputy undersecretary of state. In 1975 Brown retired from the Foreign Service to become president of the Middle East Institute. In April and May 1975 he served President Ford as director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina, which was in charge of evacuating Americans and Vietnamese from Saigon and settling Vietnamese and Cambodian refugees in the United States. Brown was a special presidential envoy to Lebanon in April and May 1976. Recently he made a series of. trips to various Middle Eastern countries at the invitation of Egyptian, Iranian and Jordanian governments. Continued from page 1 The Snipe is part of a diminishing breed of old moonshiners. He isn't old; his customs are, handed down through the generations, dating back to the Scotch-Irish Ulsterman who settled the Catawba River valley in the mid 1700s. Over the past century, especially since the days of national and statewide prohibition, good corn liquor, made from corn malt in all-copper stills, has become harder to find. Families that used to make a living from it quit because their reputations in church and community were at stake. The old art of "blockading" whiskey (manufacturing), which you drank yourself and sold to friends, had grown into large-scale "bootlegging" operations (manufacturing and selling), run by the so-called moonshine mafia." To meet increased demands in cities as far away as Atlanta and New Orleans, and to avoid the law, these young "bootleggers" moved their operations underground and switched from corn to sugar, which ferments faster. There no longer was a large profit in the moonshine business, especially since store-bought liquor was cheaper. When state-operated ABC stores opened in Catawba County in 1949, almost all large- and small-scale operations halted. The results are easy tosee. In that year alone, ABC stores in the county grossed the ninth-largest sales of the 31 cities and counties that had voted to have stores under the regulations of the Liquor Control Act of 1 937. The figure was about $1.4 million, and it has risen steadily to a present mark of almost $5 million. No. 8 out of 1 19 cities and counties. For the record, Orange County, which has, as we know, a different kind of drinking reputation, wasn't too far behind with almost $3.3 million sold in 1974. But moonshine is being made today by people who consider it an enjoyable hobby, like the Snipe, and by people who make it on a larger scale to ship to ghettos. Either way, in most cases 75 per cent of the stuff is cut with water, cut with Clorox, fake, condensed through radiators, contains lead salts and is downright poisonous. Wednesday, April 6 a distilling outfit was raided and destroyed in Burke County by federal agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms of the U.S. Treasury Department. The two stills were described as made of metal, not copper, and the outfit included a radiator condenser. The liquor that ran from it probably contained invisible lead salts and bits of rust. The Snipe, though, was quick to point out that not all radiators have lead-solder seams and lead solder repairs, which are dissolved by acetic acid in the distilling process. "A 1952, say, a 1950, 1952 Lincoln radiator will bring a top price man because it's all copper, and they're just as good as any copper work you'd ever want to make. But the thing is, what they do is get these modern ones, and they got all that lead and everything in them lead and zinc and that's, that's what'll get you. "That's why it's dangerous now. Really, in all honesty, unless somebody's got one of these old outfits, and you know exactly where it comes from, and the man's gonna make him some to drink himself, and this and that and the other, I wouldn't advise anybody, I mean anybody, to drink any of this moonshine that's going around." It may have a good tang to it, and it may make you good and crazy drunk, but eventually, it'll blind you. Even the best and safest homemade liquor nowadays, if you're lucky enough to find any, is made from fermented horse feed. Corn malt takes too long and sugar is too expensive. The Snipe said he uses wheat bran and shorts. He "mashes in" about once a week, and runs off 12 to 15 cases (six gallons to the case), selling it at $50 a case or $12 a gallon. With the cost of running off a case, being around $30, at most, he makes $300 a week making liquor. -. From what I was told, the Snipe makes good stuff from an all-copper unit, but I've learned that you can't trust a man by his word alone. Yeh, I had me a little taste, all in good faith, you understand. I mean you just don't go talk to a blockader without sampling his goods. That would be poor manners. It was good; it woke me up on a Sunday morning. But I didn't buy any. You see, he's the Snipe, and I never saw him, nor what I was drinking. I When I think about pizza. When my wallet says I can't afford pizza. When the delivery guy leaves three large pizzas (with everything) at my door by mistake. A x & , " " ' '-"fate's' "'OJlI ""iMv mp?-., &,3asr : 'yur' ,m- ' w ' ,y4v yr f X, 'A NX Tf'b' - " ' , -4 ' &k J - Actually, cnyitmo's tho right ilmo to cay Bud&cfctz rrJ ivisn youtio, you've really cald it all! MARLBOROUGH STEREO COOPERATIVE HUGE DISCOUNTS on all brands of stereo equipment, even the "no-discount" lines. We really care about your system, and NO ONE beats our prices. Write for quote we can help. MSC Box 776, Lenox. Mass. 01240. 1963 Triumph Spitfire: great mileage 4045 mpg, good mechanical condition, perfect car for student living nearby. 4150-200. Call 933-8831 anytime. Wedding veil purchased in Belgium. Hand sewn Brussels lace. Walking length. Never used. Have decided to wear a family heirloom instead. 190 or best offer. 929-6927. HONDA CB400 4-cylinder. Excellent condition. Very smooth and very quick. Drives, handles and performs very different from 350, 360 or any other 400. $850. 942-1352. CL 360 Honda. Excellent condition. Green and black. Heavy canvas cover and helmets included. S600.00 or best offer. Call 942-7268. Spring semi-formal: April 16 at 9 p.m. Place: Great Hall. Band: Great American Pastimes. Tickets on sale at Union desk. Price: S3 per person. VW GOT THE BLAHS? Major tuna-ups $12.50 plus parts. Mufflers 47.50 installed. Clutches, brakes, valve jobs, rebuilds. Tel. The Bug Haus evenings at 967-7414 for appointment. VW wanted that requires repair, overhaul. 967-7414 evenings. preferably engine INSTA-COPY. offset printing & 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. ' INTERESTED IN LOW COST JET TRAVELTO EUROPE AND ISRAEL? STUDENT TRAVEL CENTER can help you travel with maximum flexibility & minimum cost. For more info call TOLL FREE 800 325-8034. 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. Quiet graduate student would liketo share housing for 1 977-78 academic year. Please contact Linda Fortney, 15 Montrose Ave.. Athens, Ohio 45701. For rent: 2 bedroom apt. to sublet for summer. Unfurnished. Option to renew in the fall. On bus route, si 60.00 per month & utilities. Call 967-1 952 evenings. Visiting professor and wife wih to housesit June 1 August 15. Will rent or sublease furnished house or apt. Write P.O. Box 464, MTSU, Murfreesboro, Tenn. 37132. Furnished Kingswood apartment for summer sublet. Two bedrooms, pool, air conditioned, on bus line. Rent $160 or negotiable. Karen 942-4376. 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. TEACHERS at all levels. Foreign and Domestic Teachers, Box 1063, Vancouver. Washington 98660. Part time help wanted, giving out samples in supermarkets Fridays and Saturdays, April 29 through June 18. Car necessary. For more info write: Market Research Assoc.. Inc.. 34 Brittany Ct., Charlotte. N.C. 28211. , 1 00 reward for the return of or information leading to the recovery of regimental flag taken from Raleigh National Guard armory on Oct. 23. 4' x 6' Royal rayon with gold fringe. No questions asked. Call collect 919-833-4271. Male roommate needed, for apartment close to campus. Ideal for summer school. Summer only. Private bedroom, private bath. Call 942-1124. Graduating senior who will be attending University of Kentucky next fall that needs roommate to share nice apartment call George at 933-7422 orZBT Fratemitv. SINGLES ONLY! HESHE ... Chapel Hill's deting service . . . would like to turn you on to a good deal. For a very nominal service fee, we'll process your application and crossmatch you with five other compatible applicants of the opposite sex. If we can't match you satisfactorily, you pay nothing. Our guarantee is that simple. We can't please everyone, but we're trying. If you're a single, social male or female, over 1 8, and interested in an exciting, fun alternative to meeting other compatible singles in this area, why not send for our brochure? It's yours free for this ad and your stamped, self -addressed envelope. HESHE, BOX 1109, Chapel Hill. N.C. 27514. 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. Offtces are at the Student Union Building. Un.versrty of North Carolina. Chapel Hill. N.C. .2 J.ephon nunn: News. Sports 933 - Wm?4 Butinn- Circution. Advertising. Subscription semester. rates $25 per year; $12.50 per The Campus Governing Council shall have powers to determine the Student Activitiei Fee and to approprMjte all revenue derived from the Student Act.vrt.es F O.t 1 4 of the Student Constitution). t.'1'.!!! rMrvw "' 122 T"1 ' dvertuement. and to rev.se or turn away copy it considers objectionable. !! '." "mnot wtkJeredjustmenttor ' "y ypeflrphicel errors or Z.Z??J.T",on un, notice is given to the -t.'!"1 PPaars. within (1) day of receiving n,,,. eipt.on of the paper. The Da.y Tar Heel w.ll not be responsible formers than one "correct insertion of an advertisement cneduted to run several times. Notice for such corrects n,,u, vn before the next insertion. VarnTto' BusmessMgr.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 13, 1977, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75