Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 25, 1977, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 The Daily Tar Heel Monday. April 25. 1977 Public service announcements must be turned in to the box Union by 1.00 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item Activities Today The freshman physical therapy class meeting will be held at 4 p.m. in the Allied Health Auditorium. The Black Student Movement and the Revolutionary Student Brigade will sponsor A Day of Solidarity for Freedom in Southern Africa from 1 1:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the Pit. Rain location: Great Hall. The Department of Statistics Colloquium presents Dr. Scott B. Guthery of Bell Laboratories in New Jersey at 4 p.m. in Room 265 Phillips Hall. Refreshments will be served at 3:30 p.m. in Room 316 Phillips Hall. Students in Professor William Powell's History 80 seminar will read research papers on the history of the University ofNorth Carolina at 2 p.m. in Room 300 New West. Senior Week begins today! There will be a party from 2:15 until. . .in the Pit. Music will be provided by Blaine Smith, Mike Key and Grant Vosburgh. Let's get naked! The Carolina Bridge Club will hold an ACBL-sanctioned bridge tournament at 7:30 p.m. in Room 207 of the Carolina Union. All bridge players regardless of ability or experience are welcome. If you need a partner, call 967-4 172. UNCstudents 50; all others-75c. Upcoming Events The UNC Recreation Society will hold a very important meeting at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 26 in Room 206 of the Carolina Union. Election of next year's officers will be held. Please come and participate. The Campus Governing Council will hold its last meeting of the semester at 9 p.m. Tuesday, April 26. All members are urged to be present. The UNC Sailing Club will hold its last meeting at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 26 in Room 205 of the Carolina Union. Plans for next fall will be laid out. All welcome! There will be a meeting of the Undergraduate History Association at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 26 in Room 423 Hamilton Hali. All members are urged to attend as plans are being made for next fall. American Medical College Applications Service pakcets have arrived in the Predental-Premedical Advising Office in Room 311 South Building and Room 101 Nash Hall. Pick up your packet and bring it to the work session at 7 p.m. Wednesday, indian liberal past its reputation spoke of. "In 1954 professors here at UNC had the gall to claim that the Lumbees were not Indians," Jones said. "As Indians we've had to scratch and fight to enter educational institutions in this state. "There are 44,000 Indians in North Carolina, which makes them 1 per cent of the state's population," Jones said. "North Carolina still has the largest population of Indians east of the Mississippi. Forty per cent of them are under poverty level." Jones said the eastern North Carolina tribes are recognized by the federal government in name only, and they do not qualify for aid from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. "I see property rights, energy policy, pollution laws and the right of living wages as fundamental needs of Indians," Jones said. The N.C. Commission on Indian Affairs has worked to rehabilitate homes, increase Sprung Cleaning Special! Webster's New 20th Century Dictionary, unabridged. Eleven pounds of solid, useful, up-to-date information an invaluable reference work for home, school and office. Here's what the AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION said about it in their official publication, The Booklist: "The larger type and the less-crowded set-up of the items give the dictionary a definite superiority over similar ones in readability and in appearance of the pages... Recommended as an authoritative, up-to-date, and readable dictionary for general use." Easily the most outstanding value in unabridged dictionaries every offered! 2,354 pages 8 x 10 ; x V2 thumb-indexed $59.95 KT x 10ft" x 4i2 " thick 2354 naaes. thumh-inHpypH over aZuAKK) vorahn taru orroo thousands of new unrHs and mpanino? - w w w m m w W B, more than 3000 snot illustrations 32 Daaes in full-color. morp than natural and man-made wonders from birds to ships, flowers to cars, jewels to planes - If t r lb tull-oaqe color maDS ot the 169 oaass of encyclopedic suDDlements t dictionaries of bioqraohv and dictionaries of noted names in legend and the Scriptures Limited number iff" Compiled by outside the OTH offices in the will run at least twice. Jan ParkQr Apri 27 in Room 107 Berryhill Hall. Items of Interest Lee Fleming of the - Jack Eckerd Foundation will hold interviews for camp counselors today from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday April 26 at the Career Planning and Palcement Office. There will be a general lecture at 3 p.m. today. Check the placement office for location. All interested students can apply for full-time careers as counselors of emotionally-disturbed children in wilderness settings. Interested in art? Interviews for the Union Gallery Committee will be held Monday and Tuesday April 25-26. Applications and interview sign-up sheets are at the Union desk. For more information, call Susanna Bowen at 942-1538. Go home this summer a Skydiver! The UNC Parachute Club will be holding its last class at 6:30 p.m. M onday through Thursday April 25-28 in Room 303 Woolen Gym. Your first jump will be made that weekend. Experience the ultimate high for only $35.00. Applications for committee chairpersons of the International and Appalachian Handicrafts Bazaar are still available at the YM-YWCA office. Please complete and return by Thursday April 28. The last and absolutely final chance to subscribe to the 1977 Yackety Yack will be here soon. Tables will be set up from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. until April 28 at the Union and from 9 to I p.m. at the Y-court. Cost is only $10.00. After Thursday it's tough luck. Girls interested in signing up for Fall Rush should sign up from 1 to 5 p.m. until April 29 in the Panhellenic Office in the Carolina Union. The topic and director(s) of the 1978 Carolina Symposium will be chosen Thursday and Friday April 28-29. Any student with a topic proposal should contact Dean of Student Affairs Boulton at 933-5597 by Wednesday, April 27. Proposals should include topic explanations, participant and program possibilities and estimations of funding sources and levels. Proposals should be ready for presentation by Thursday, April 28. Preregistration for all currently enrolled students in the Evening College for summer and fall 1977 is taking place in Room 214 Abernethy Hall until May 6. Undergraduate applications for fall semester need to be turned in by July 14th and graudate applications by August 5. Continued from page 1 . rent subsidies, mortgage assistance and home-building funds. Labor problems have been attacked by training programs and public service employment, Jones said. The General Assembly in 1971 gave $12,500 for the establishment of the commission. "That was not nearly enough, but at first it was more important to get a commission." Jones said. "One and one-half million dollars comes in now from the federal government for Indians in North Carolina," Jones said. "Health-care problems are very severe," Jones said. "The federal administration set up does not deal effectively with off reservation Indians. We need to make a bigger pie instead of trying to split it more ways." American Indians have been notorious for being unable to cooperate with themselves on economic matters, Jones said. "That's the one thing that's always caused problems for us," he said. Now only $19.95 a a y 1000 Hrauincrc rf wor d Qeooraohv fiction, mvtholoqv. to sell! Cio) open 'til 10 p.m. University Mall and Downtown - Chapel Hill Seminar on By ROBERT THOMASON Staff Writer A UNC history course offered for the first time this semester at the request of students may be offered again if enough students express an interest, the course's professor said. The course, a H istory 90 seminar, deals with the history of the University. It originated when approximately 25 persons submitted a petition to the chairperson of the history department, according to William S. Powell, former curator of the North Carolina Collection and the course's instructor. "Although I am not seeVing the Freshman killed in car accident Russell "Skip" Cowell, a 19-year-old freshman from Silver Spring, Md., died Thursday from injuries sustained in a single-car accident near linston. Graveside services were held Friday in Chapel Hill. Cowell was driving to a relative's funeral when the accident occurred. According to a Highway Patrol spokesperson, the student was traveling south on N.C. 256, six miles south of Kins ton, when his car ran off the right side of the road. The car then crossed the road, and struck a large tile at the end of a driveway. Cowell died later in the day at Pitt Memorial Hospital in Greenville. Helms web of federal regulations, reports and controls which have caused educators across the country to warn that the very existence of independent education in the United States is being threatened," Helms said in a 42-page statement accompanying the legislation. "By far the greatest cause of this flood of federal regulations affecting higher education is the social engineering of federal bureaucrats," he said. "And by far, the greatest mechanism to implement these regulations has been the use of affirmative action quotas and goals." Helms said the affirmative action interpretation being used by the government Shrimp Saladl Now the Porthole's famous Garden Salad is available with baby shrimp. (not to mention our other TO toppings). 942-1171 Serving daily. r I RESTAURANT) foreign words and phrases abbreviations used in writing and printing business mathematics forms of address weights and measures signs and symbols Presidents, Vice Presidents and U.S. Cabinet Officers Declaration of Independence U.S. Constitution History of Canada Charter ,of the U.N. air distances between cities business terms history of the English language e UNC 's history may con tinue enough students are interested I'm willing to teach it again," Powell said. "The course started with a look at the University's history in general," Powell said. "We went to the North Carolina Collection and went through the University's archives. We also went on a walking tour of the campus with John Allcott (professor emeritus of art and a scholar of local architecture)." As a conclusion to the work for the second half of the semester, papers written for the seminar will be read this week in the Dialectic Philanthropic Room on the third floor of New West. The presentations will be made at 2 p.m. today and Wednesday. course, if To salute South African BSM to hold 'Day of The Black Student Movement (BSM) and the Revolutionary Student Brigade will sponsor "A Day of Solidarity for Freedom in Southern Africa" from 1 1:30 to 1:30 today in the Pit. The program will consist of speakers and cultural presentations. Speakers will include Ann Dunbar, director of the African Studies Program; a member of the BSM; a national coordinator of the African Liberation Day Coalition; and a representative of the Revolutionary Student Brigade. The Ebony Readers will present a performance, and the art work of Continued from page 1 . is "fundamentally opposed to the equal opportunity" concept in the 1964 Civil Rights Act. "Affirmative action is, in reality, affirmative discrimination," he said. "The inevitable result of affirmative action implementation within the academic community has been the creation of a system of reverse discrimination." If enacted, Helms' bill would require a federal agency to develop an "education impact assessment statement" along with any new regulation. The statement would estimate the cost and time involved in complying with the measure's guidelines. The famous Porthole rolls make the Porthole salads better than the rest. 11:30-2:00 4:45-7:15 ou fight for freedom Deborah Bryant will be displayed. "What we intend to do is salute the struggle for freedom in South Africa," said Denzil Daye,a BSM spokesperson. "We also hope that, the day will be a catalyst for student support for a major march in Washington, D.C., on May 28." Do you put off tacldtag your term paper until the last minute? Then you haven discovered... mm UfSLUJ3 :; wZ!JS ... ll -111 . ... Wildarnasa Snort Photo Contest 4500 worth of and on Jack Kramer autograph tennis racquet, also a good deal. Call 933-8853. Gordon Setters for sale - beautiful black and tan setters, unusual in this area, excellent sporting dogs and family pets, extremely low pricer. Call 942-2921 or 732-8137 during day. Motobecane Mobylette 50 cc. 100 mpg, no license, no insurance, no helmet required. Excellent condition. 350. 942-4491 around 6 p.m. Mobile Home for sale. 12 x 50 2 BR furnished two ACs. Priced to sell quick at $2795.00. Available May 10. 942-2017.929-3624. REFRIGERATOR: 4.8 cu. ft. Sears bought new in September available May 1 st. 1 35.00.Call 933-6368. 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. Trouble finding a summer job? Opportunity to earn 250 per week. Call 942-7571 for job interview. Must be willing to relocate. Phi Delta Chi has rooms for summer school; for both males and females. $95 per session, air conditioning, etc. Call 968 9118. Female roommate wanted to share three bedroom Bolinwood apt. with three students for summer andor fall. Call 967-2968. Keep trying. Quiet non-smoking graduate student wants a room, of reasonable rent, within walking distance of campus. Call Yesvy at 933-7034. 933-41 53. Sublet trailer May 10-July 31. Option to renew lease. Three bedrooms, AC, washer. S110 per month. 942 6301 or 942-5222. Summer sublet - 3 bedroom apt. Townhouse Apts. May 15-Aug. 15, $200 month. Within walking distance to campus. Call 929-8827. Franco-American family, two nice boys 6 and 3, offers free room and board in town to quiet, reliable student in exchange housekeeping, babysitting. Call 942 2421. For sublet this summer: two bedroom apt. approx. 1 mile from campus. Central air, 200month (includes utilities). Call 933-3450 after 7:00. Apt. to sublet for summer: furnished, a.c, swimming pool. 160 per month plus elec. tel. Call 929-9253. Visiting professor and wife wish to housesit June 1 August 15. Will rent or sublease furnished house or apt. Write P.O. Box 464, MTSU. Murf reesboro, Tenn. 37132. Summer sublet - furnished 2 bedrooms. 34 mile from campus. University Gardens. Furnished, air conditioned, pool. Rent whole or part, amount negotiable. Call Robbie at 929-7801. Mobile homes for rent. Extra nice 2 BR 1 2 x 55 Central Air fully carpeted $1 50. 2 BR furnished A.C. cheap at 95. No pets. 942-2017 929-3542. Available May 10. Do you need a room for the summer? Kappa Psi fraternity is renting rooms for both summer sessions. Call 968-901 0 or 968-9390. Ask for the House Manager. Want to live in COMFORTall summer? CAROLINA APART MENT for sublet during summer. 2 bedrooms, den. living room, AIR-CONDITIONING. POOL, kitchen, and carpet. Only 65 each for three people. Call 933-2546933-2565933-2556. Summer rooms, short walk to campus, 65 per session. Call Delta Tau Delta, ask for Brian or Jay 968-9063. his studnets' research has pointed out that some past students who were expelled from the University later filled important positions. Once a student was peUed for shooting at a faculty member and another for throwing rocks at a faculty member, Powell said. These two later served as speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives, minister to Spain and trustee -to the University Another student expelled after being accused of stealing money later became a U.S. Senator from Missouri. , ", ' ... , 4 , "I'm please'd with the work the students have done," Powell said. "There has been some good research from original, material." Solidarity' Annther rallv is piannea lor Wednesday at UNC at Greensboro, said Judy Lang of the Revolutionary Student Brigade. Tar Heel Classifieds Cost Only $1.50 "Never have I read a book that has such an impact on my life in so many ways ' -Robert L. Gienvew Hi "Dr. Dyer has blended humor, powerful in sight into human behavior, and an alarmingly straight forward approach to personal mastery " -DB., St Pou Minn $6.95 . FUNK &WAGN ALLS N ikon gear 8 an adventure trip for winners I For rules & entry form write: Mariah Magazine, Rm. D2, 3401 W. Division, Chicago, IL 60651. Wanted: Good home for my beautiful calico cat for the summer (5-15 to 8-8). Will pay food and other expenses plus 25. Call 942-7774. MOVING?? We're Truckin' Movers and we can do any moving job for 25 to 50 less than any other moving company. Call 942-7500 between 4 and 8 p.m. for more details. To Peabodie Happy Birthday to may favorite statistic! (How's it feel to be an OLD woman?) Love, your Manphryd (Angle). CLASSIFIED ADS ARE EASY TO USEI JUST FILL OUT THE AD FORM (AVAILABLE IN THE CAROLINA UNION) AND DROP IT IN CAMPUS MAILOR BRING IT BY THE DTH OFFICE. REACH OVER 20.000 PEOPLE FOR ONLY 1. 50. BAY MEADOWS CAMP "a complete recreational day camp for boys and girls." Offering instruction in swimming, sailing, canoeing, horseback riding, archery and many other sports and activities. Sessions starting Mon . June 21 St. For further information call 942-5518 or write Bay Meadows Camp. Route 6, Box 147B, Chapel Hill. Low cost flights to Europe from 259. Israel from 469, plus Africa and the Far East. Call Toll Free Europe Int'l. Ltd. (800) 223-7676. 100 reward for return of two female Siamese cats. Lost 420 at South Square. No questions asked. Call 383-6853 Keep trying, please. 25 reward for "Gypsy," a small to medium sue black semi-shaggy dog with tan lege. Lost between campus and Eastgate. Call 967-1180. Lost: Wednesday, a set of keys on a safety pin between Davie. Smith and Under-Grad. Please call 933-7310. Found: (Just after Apple Chill) 1 roll of Kodak'Pocket' Color Film-exposed thru no. 7. These are obviously someone's Wonderful memories, so call 933-5224 for recovery. The Daily Tar Heel is published by the Daily Tar Heel Board of Directors of the University of North Carolina daily Monday through Friday during the regular academic year except during exam period, vacations and summer sessions. The following dates are to be the only Saturday issues: Sept 17, Oct. 1. 8, 22. Nov. 5. The Summer Tar Heel is published weekly on Thursdays during the summer sessions. Offices are at the Frank Porter Graham Student Union Building. University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, .N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers News. Sports-r-933-0245, 933-0246. 933-0252. 933-0372; Business. Circulation, Advertising 933-1163. w 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 all revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.14 of the Student Constitution). The Daily Tar Heel is a student organization. The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise or turn away copy it considers objectionable. The Daily Tar Heel will not consider adjustments or payment for any typographical errors or erroneous insertion unless notice is given to the Business Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement appears, within (1) day of receding the tear sheets or subscription of the paper. The Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible tor 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 Business Manager "C"ms Sales Manager Phihp Atkins Advertising Manager .... i I 1 mm & mm
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 25, 1977, edition 1
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