2 The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday, October 5, 1977 campus Compiled by Jodi Bishop Public service announcements must be turned in to the box outside the DTH offices in the Union by 1 00 p m if thev re to run the nent day Each item will run al least twice TODAY'S ACTIVITIES A Chemistry Coeoqukim will he held i II am. in 308 Venahk Hall John Sinfetl of the Emnn Research and Engineering Co will speak. An IRSS Short Court. "Dialog." will he held at 2 p m. in 209 Manning Hall. A Focus Bible Study will meet from noon to I p m. in 2 10-A New Went Hill Bring your lunch and your Bible A UNCCC Snort Court. "Computer Assisted Documentation Preparation." will be held al 3 p.m. in 228 Phillips Hall. A Crr Process Workshop. "Job-Seeking." will be held at J p m in I0 Hanet Hall The Trinidad Tripoli Slttt Band will perform at 4 p m. in the Forest Theatre. Admission ii SI. SO. An open meeting for the Foundation Rssource Center will be held at 4 p ut. in 1 1 1 Murphey Hall. An explanation of the center will be made to deans, director! and department heads. A Focus on Documentary Seri, Painter l Painting, will be shown st 8 p m in Carroll Hall. The Audubon WUdlHe Film. Hidden HorUsofthe Big Cypress Swamp, will be ihown at 8 p.m. in Hamilton Hall Auditorium. Admuiion ii by scaton ticket and unglc-evtnl tickets are available al the Carolina Union. The N.C. Coastal Club will hold a short but important business meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the South Lounge oftheCarolina Union. UNC Common Cause will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 213. Carolina Union. Projects for the fall will be discussed and all interested persons arc welcome. Delta Sigma PI. the professional business fraternity, will hold Us fall rush at 7:30 p.m. in 1-7 New Carroll. Rush is open to all undergraduates in business, economics, industrial relations and accounting. The Science Fiction and Fantasy Clubt hold regular meetings at 7 p.m. in Room 308, Alumni Hall. All interested persons are invited. A general meeting of ECOS will be held al 8 p.m. in Room 201 of Bingham Hall. All members are urged to attend and the general public is welcome. Any member of the UNC Craw Club seriously interested in participating in various fund-rsising projects this fall is asked to meet at 8 p m in the Carolina U mon. If you have any questions, call Phyllis at 942-1203 or at 967-9166. Auditions (or the Opoya Dencere (males only) will be held at 6 p.m. today and Thursday. Oct. 6 in the Morrison Rcc Room. An important meeting of the Executive Commute of the Order Ol the Old WH will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the South Gallery Meeting Room. The UNC Tennis Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 207. Carolina Union. Call 933-1013 i( you cannot attend. Bring S2 (or annual dues. The International Folk Dancers will meet at 7 p.m. at the Student Center o( University Presbyterian Church All students are invited. There will be a meeting of the Seoet of the Gradual and Pro t salon al Student Federation at 6 p.m. in Room 213 Carolina Union. The Joint Duke-UNC Colloquium presents Colin D. Clark from the University of Reading, England, at 3:50 p.m. in Room 263. Phillips Hall. Coffee and tea will be served at 3:30 p.m. in Room 277. The Pocket Theater will present "If You Don't Like My Ocean Don't Fish in My Sea" at 8 30 p.m Oct. 5 to Oct. 7. Tickets are available at the Old World Gift Shop on Franklin Street and The Ranch House. Call 942-3133 (or reservations. Michael Ching. a recipient ol Mary Duke Blddl Schotarehlp in composition will present a piano concert at 8 IS p.m. on in the East Duke Music Room. Noadmission is charged. Campus organizations offered O access to WXYC Campus organizations will be allowed air time on WXYC radio to use as they wish beginning Oct, 14 through the station's new program, "Organizational Access." Any group may receive five minutes of air time at 6:05 p.m. on a Friday, following the WXYC news. If many groups apply for air time, the show w ill be run on additional week nights. The show will be set up on a first produced, first-run basis, and no group will Asst. prof, victim of hubcap rip-off near Swing Hall University Police reported that Dr. H . E. Mayberry, assistant professor of anatomy, said four hubcaps were stolen from his 1972 Ford station wagon sometime Monday afternoon. The car was parked in the Swing Building parking lot at the time of the incident. Police estimate the value of the hubcaps at $80. Advertise in 128 E. Franklin Street cPwf A ' J rr Next to Yogurt Barn Downtown XHl V Bar Phone: 929-8276 Dell Phone: 929-3824 KW -jf Jft POUND jy-C ROGERS vhT BAND Tonight and Thursday FAST PWW I ANNIE calendar The UNC lc Hockey will hold a meetingat 7 p.m in Room 21 7 of the Carolina Union. All members should attend and bring checkbooks. Stammtlsch, the German table, meets at 10 p.m. every Wednesday at Hoagic's Heroes. All male and female members of IheUNC-CH Water Polo Club please meet in front of Bowman Gray Indoor Pool at 5:30 p.m. 1 here u a match at Duke tonight. St. John'e MCC Wednesday Bible Study will not meet this week Regular meetings will resume Oct. 12 al 8 p.m. Hospital, a documentary film by Frederick Wiseman, will be the presentation in the Health Issues film series at noon in the School o( Health auditorium. The Cofte Klatch meets (rom 9 to 1 1 a.m. in the Pine Room. Codec and pastries are sold Sponsored by the campus Y. The first ol a two-part series How Shall Wa Than Live? by Francis Schacffer. will begin at 7 p.m. inGreat Hallof theCarolina Union. Part two is Thursday at 7 p.m Sponsored by the Campus Christian Fellowship. Free admission. UPCOMING EVENTS The Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Society will sponsor a "Poetry Night" at 8 p m Thursday. Oct. 6 in 300 New West. The public is invited. The UNC Jugglers Association will meet at 4 p.m. Thursdav. Oct 6at the Old Well. Beginners are welcome. Th UNC Scuba Club will meet at 7 p m Thursday. Oct. 6 in Room .304 o( Woollen Gym. Everyone is invited. The Gay Rap Group will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 6 in Raleigh. For more inlormalion about the group, call 929-8843 or 832-I5H2. Ihe second meeting for students interested in applying for Rhodes Scholarships will be at 5:15p.m. Thursday.Oct. 6 in 569 Hamilton Hall. Prospective candidates should bring their transcript, a list of activities and a personal statement. Th LDSSA (Mormons) Film Series begins at 8 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 6 in 101 Greenlaw Come and find out more about Mormon beliefs. Films will be Th First Vlalon and Th Loal Manuscript. T he second organizational meeting (or Excellence In Audio Reproduction (EAR) will be at 7 :30 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 6 in Room 206 of the Carolina Union All persons interested in stereo and or audio are welcome. Plans for a super "super stereo sound party" will be discussed. For more information, call Paul at 91 V 8813. Hlnton Jamet presents My Little Chickadee, starring W. C. Fields and Mae West, and Sahara Hare al 7 and 9 p m 1 hursday, Oct. 6 in the Hinlon James Recreation Room. Admission is 50 cents, and (ree refreshments will be provided Th. South Campus and Granville Otf-Camput chapters of Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will present the multimedia show. The Effective Ambassador at 8 p m. Thursday. Oct. 6 in the Morrison social lounge. The Granville chapter will meet at 7:30 p.m. in ihe lobby of Granville South to walk to Morrison. Everyone is welcome. The UNC-CH Collegiate Clvltan Club will meet al 6:30 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 6 in Room 206 of theCarolina Union. All interested students are welcome. For more information, call 93J-259J. A medical technology meeting will be held al 7:15 p.m. Thursday. Oct 6 in Room 213 of the Carolina Union. A Career Planning and Placemen! representative will be guest speaker Med lech T-shirts will be on sale lor $2. Th Christian Science Organisation will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 6 in Room 213 Carolina Union The topic is purposeful living, and everyone is welcome. The Alchemist, UNC's interdisciplinary science magaine. will meet al 8 p m Thursday. Oct 6 in Room 205 Carolina Union. All air time be allowed continuous airing. WXYC will furnish production materials for shows and will provide staff members to assist a group with its presentation. WXYC ran the program earlier this fall, with organizations being allowed 1 5 minutes of air time, but many of the participating groups found they could not fill the 15 minutes. The new program will require only five minutes for a presentation rather than 15. Some of the participating groups also had complained about the time slot designated for the show, so it has been changed to 6:05 p.m. Presentations are due by noon on Wednesdays prior to airing on a given Friday. Groups interested in air time during the first few weeks of the program should contact Don Moore, WXYC general manager, at 933-7768. A regular schedule of shows will be established after the first few weeks of airing, and interested groups then should contact WXYC's public affairs directorforairtime. Air time cannot be used for contests, commercials or pitches for events with an admission charge, and obscenities and personal attacks are prohibited. the DTH Classifieds . . . it's a sure bet interested persons are welcome: stall positions are still available. AN taw Sludent spouses are invited lo the October business meeting of the Law Guild at 7 :30 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 6. For directions to the meeting, call 967-8076 or 942-2056. How lo make macrame hangers for plants will be demonstrated. Are you interested in working for the Student Consumer Action Union (SCAU) on its new Consumer Health Handbook or Health Education program? Attend a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 6 in Suite B Carolina Union. International Students: North Campus Intervarsits Christian Fellowship challenges you lo a volleyball match and invites vou to a pot-luck dinner afterwards. Y'all come. The contest begins at 5:30 p.m. 1 hursday. Oct. 6 on Mclver lawn. Students and faculty are invited to attend a showing ol Turkish classical tin art by Faima Karpurcu from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday. Oct. 6 at the International Center in Bynum Hall. Turkish refreshments will be served. ITEMS OF INTEREST A description and registration (orm for the Carolina Union Special Internet Classes can he picked up at the Carolina Union Desk. Registration runs through Friday. Oct. 7. 1 he Pine-Knoll Community Organization ol Chapel Hill is making plans for a Fall Tutorial Program. The program will run live days a week from 3 to 5 p.m. and will include math, language arts and reading. We need volunteers to donate their time, money or materials for this cause For information please contact Mae McLendon at 942-657 1 (after 6 p m.) or Jackie Parrish at 942-7701 (after 2 p m l Agora, th magazine ol International Ideas, is now accepting contributions (articles, short stories, poems) about international relations or the politics, arts, literature, geography or language of specific countries. Anyone interested - faculty, staff, students -should leave a copy of the manuscript in Room 105 of the International Center in Bynum Hall or call the center at 9.13-566 1. Join the UNC Parachute Club and we will teach you our safe and excitingsport of skydiving Sign up now (or our next class Call 933-1532 for more information. Students attempting lo gel In-ttata atatut for tuition purposes should start organizing their cases now. More information can be Hiking primitive The N.C. Botanical Garden and Mondamin Wilderness Adventures will conduct a three-day hiking and primitive camping trip Oct. 14. Participants will meet at Camp Mondamin in Tuxedo, just outside Hendersonville, to establish a base camp in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Durham By BEVERLY MILLS Staff Writer The Durham City Council voted Monday to reduce water sales to the Orange Water and Sewer Authority (OWASA) to a maximum of 1.5 million gallons per day. Durham Director of Transportation and Utilities Robert Peck said the new water altmS from University Lake from University Lake from Durham Level of University Lake Total consumption Level of University Lake limit took effect Tuesday. The only reason for the cutback is the severe shortage Durham faces. Peck said. "If we continue to consume at the present rate, without additional rainfall, Durham will run out in mid-December or early January," Peck said. "This consumption rate includes the 1 .5 million gallons sold lo OWASA. Correction The Daily Tar Heel incorrectly reported Monday that Chi Omega sorority won the legs contest conducted by Sigma Chi fraternity as part of Derby Week. Alpha Chi Omega sorority won the legs contest. The DTH regrets the error. SAVE WATER I nc Uciiiy irrusswora ACROSS 1 Tends the lawn 5 Chessmen 10 Nearly closed 14 Wings 15 Final stanza 16 Soccer star 17 Cheaply put together 19 Stage item 20 Mine detec tors 21 Swears 23 Gr. letter 24 Dies 25 Penning 29 Doctor of a kind 32 Dill, old style 33 Action 35 Gin variety 36 Ermine or mink 37 Squealer 38 Tavern 39 History stages 41 Civet's cousin 43 Thalia's sister 44 Actor Peter 46 "The Time of Your Life" writer 48 Dumb gal 49 Chaney 50 Relaxes 53 Magic lamp boy 57 Coagulate 58 TV person ality 60 Yorkshire river 61 - Arden 62 Swag 63 Former hus band of Liz 64 Word of assurance 65 Sea birds DOWN Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: TTo u n bToH a" n e jw I 0 l ftA V A I LL R. VJ 111 Mi 11 1 fi Jl 1 11"' 3 K t AjjN ACS fcl'ir! M J M f RflC 0 I. I Tit tkj T 'kTT n "Z T T 7 Tju TT A H 1 HN 11 L "Cab. I 1 L nt" 3a 111 ttfY C 3 1 1 1 1 3i i 1 1 1 lit 1 1 1 L 111 ill 1 1 1 ilA 1 1 1 0 R RaJ sa(,1an"h I lE 1 Military to', v 1 p 0 U, r"" p 5 p 8 R rio in i2 1 1 3 TH T5 M -H . L rj J- H '- i7i '"" l.o j.r " 29 3I U """33 if "IS ts 1 37 "ts t iim , - Sssw . i (9 'H) ; ll -l2. li u !rr" w m : " ""1 : vHb fT" v v i IT 35 v) Co . TH "" ? I I I t J I 1 1 1 ft J 1 1 1 in m M' iii i mi ii mi iimniiHim obtained Irom Ihe Residency Counseling Service ol SCAU Hours arc posted on Suite H door of the Carolina Union. Applications for the Gradual Management Admission Test (GMAT) must be received in Princeton. N J. by Oct. 14. fhecostis i 1 2.50 and a late (ee of $4 is charged for applications received after Oct. 14. "Walk-In" costs SlOextra. Application formsare available in Room 106. Nash Hall. 1977-78 Graduate Study in Management catalogues are available in Room 101. Nash Hall Applications lor the Optometry College Admission Test (OCAT) must be received in New York City by Oct. 8. The lest w ill he given on Nov. Sin Durham. The cost isS25andapplicationsare available in Room 106. Nash Hall. Information about the N.C. contacts with Optometry schools and catalogues are in Room 101 of Nash Hall. Students who disapprove of Soul hern Bell's fee increase can sign a Residence Housing Association petition al the Carolina Union or VMCA building. Interested students should come by from 10a.m. to 2 p m. The petition will be available Oct. 4-7. Volunteer tutors arc needed lor the Campus YMCA Tutorial Program. Any interested persons should come hy Room 102 at the YMCA building to pick up applications, which will be accepted through Oct. 21. I he Cellar Door, the undergraduate liicrun nugainc. will he accepting poetry, prose and graphics through Oct. 15. Koines can he brought to the Union Desk and led in Hnx 22 or brought to the Cellar Door olfkc in Room 205 al the YMCA building Student Interested In foreign service careers can meet at 10 a.m. on Oct. 1 3 to talk with Frederic A. Fisher, deputy examinerol Ihe Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service. An examination will be given lo interested students Dec. 3 Applications for the examination are due Oct. 21. For more information contact the Career Planning and Placement Office. 21 1 Hanes Hall. The PtaymakH Repertory Company will present Peter Shaffer's play Equus Oct. 1 3 to 30. The play will be shown at 8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday'and at 2 p.m. on Sunday. Special performances will he shown at 8 p m. on Oct. 23 and at 2 p.m. on Oct. 26. For more information contact the box office at933-M2l. camping offered Guided day hikes will be conducted from valley areas to high ridge lines to observe the wild plants which will be in bloom. Enrollment in the group is limited to 20 persons on a first-come, first-served basis. For applications and information about registration and fees, call the botanical garden at 967-2246. council votes to Peck said Lake Michie was 16 feet below the level of the dam Tuesday. Regardless of the level of Lake Michie, Peck said he does not think Durham will ever cut off its water supply to Chapel Hill. "The city council probably came as close to cutting Chapel Hill off last nigjit as they will come," he said. A motion which would have ended sales to fr rain 5.088 million gallons 2.806 million gallons 2.282 million gallons 62 inches below capacity 4.623 million gallons 61 inches below capacity OWASA immediately was defeated by the council Monday. W.H. Cleveland, assistant director of OWASA, stressed the need for continued conservation. "All we can do is warn people to Texas Instfumetrts 'electronic cok tJotO' It. - -j SR-40 .V.50fr SR-51 M 49.9? fa ne-j N-57 69 Q 3 71 ofi .09 rrrii Tl -59 J5-, 9? I 444ii 411 SWI s Mil, I 10 4l4l4flin SHIPPfP IRI , I tlSIOSSItrS At ' sls Ml S4AI 10 IWOWRS W t W HIMiiHIUS tl 0 OR CO 0 . -' Oil III Surveyors Supply Company ? 0 SDK M0 104 It Mm srr Mi WRTNfAfiCXIW ' 0' Olflfc.' ,'LWO THIS 40 IS Sf LOOM HUH PlMSf ci ip i or ruruRf uimm by Marion Moeser men: abbr. 2 Olive genus 3 Woof's partner 4 Paradise spoiler 5 Mark the herd again 6 Burden 7 Egg: comb, form 8 Caffeine source 9 In session 10 Court pro-" ceedings 1 1 Ms. Langtry 12 Much 13 Good names, for short 18 Himalayan creature 22 - la la 25 Vaults 26 Accustom 27 Carter's predecessor 28 Vidal et al. 29 Poker stakes 30 Russian girl's name 31 Mortise's partner 34 Author Fleming 40 Having openings 41 Farm asso ciations 42 Foxhunt cry 43 Be sympa thetic 45 Before 47 Have wan derlust 50 Be off! 51 Mixture 52 Capital of Yemen 53 Bows 54 Before mat or knob 55 One of the Ages 56 Tennis needs 59 Singer Clark o c T3 C w (A 3 aj Z z di c 3 J3 O w O jO Ol Carrboro's growth promotes two opposing political parties By EVELYN SAHR Staff Writer The Republicans and the pemocrats dominate the U.S. political scene. In Germany, the principal political parties are the Social Democrats and the Christian Democrats. In the Carrboro political arena, there are the Allied Citizens and the Community Coalition. The two parties evolved as a result of the continued growth of the town, according to Ernie Patterson, one of the original members of the Carrboro Community Coalition. "Carrboro is no longer a town," Patterson says. "Since it has grown over the years to encompass such a wide range of constituents and issues, it now faces the problems of a small city, and must deal with these problems as a small city would. "We were strongly concerned about the distribution of services within Carrboro. We felt that everybody blacks and renters as well as homeowners, had the right to an equal share of these services." As a response to this concern, Patterson says, the Community Coalition was organized in the fall of 1974. The coalition succeeded in winning a majority of seats on the Carrboro Board of Aldermen in the 1975 election, as well as taking control of many of the precinct offices. Patterson says the group, which is basically composed of former George McGovern backers, felt that services such as cut back water sales conserve," Cleveland said Tuesday. days to avoid rationing. This figure assumes Cleveland said the level of the lake goes consumption will average 4.7 million down at a rate of I to 1.5 inches per day, The "s per day and there will be no present level of the lake is 62.5 inches below aaiUo ra'nta- . capacity Rationing has been proposed if University Lake drops to 132 inches below capacity. According to OWASA figures, Chapel Before the Durham council's action Hill-Carrboro will need a daily supplement Monday night, OWASA was able to of 1.4 million gallons from Durham for 64 purchase 3.5 million gallons per day. J 4P$'& I ! DELICATESSEN, INC. J I Open under new management. Here's your chance to check us out. Buy one ! I sandwich, get a second (of equal or less price) FREE, I with this coupon. i I Good 5 p.m.-midnight I I Wed. & Thurs., Oct. 5 & 6 f NCNBPiaza I 136 E. Rosemary St. 929-1736 j DTH Classifieds Announcements CAMPUS COPY CENTER OPENING soon! On the alley by the big rock next to the Port Hole restaurant . Watch for grand opening this month! For Sale 1971 YAMAHA 350 R-5. Must sell immediately. Top end recently re-built; $125 firm. Call Durham 489 0060 after 3:30 p.m. CLASSICAL RECORDS for sale. In excellent condition. Good selection of labels and composers. Call 967-5347 Help Wanted PART-TIME OPENINGS: Alcoa Aluminum has openings in Chapel Hill. From $4.00hr. to $5.00hr. to start. Apply at Hanes Hall, today, Room 103, at 3:10 p.m. TWO MONTH OLD BABY needs T.L.C. near campus. 4 days a week. Only 4 hours in the morning or early afternoon. Call 929-2690. ADDRESSERS WANTED IMMEDIATELY! Work at home no experience necessary excellent pay. Write American Service, 8350 Park Lane, Suite 269, Dallas, TX 75231. THE UPWARD , BOUND PROGRAM is recruiting UNC students to tutor 10th, 11th and 12th grade high school students now. You can help if you can give a minimum of 4 hrs. or a maximum of 8 hrs. per month. Be an advocate of learning by assisting underachievers to be achievers. If interested, call Elroy Lewis at 933 1281 or 1282 or come by 201 Vance Hall. SUDIS RESTAURANT: Opening October 3 a new restaurant and tavern. Now hiring experienced food and wait people. Apply in person. Ill W. Main Street, Durham, N.C. . MEN! - WOMEN! JOBS ON SHIPS! American. Foreign. No experience required. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Summer job or career. Send $3.00 for information. SEAFAX, Dept. 1-2, Box 2049, Port Angeles, Washington 98362. WANTED RESTAURANT PERSONNEL. All positions open. Apply 157 East Franklin Street. Lost & Found FOUND: A POCKETBOOK on Franklin Street. Sunday, October 2nd. Call 688-8466 and describe. TAN LEATHER fingernail kit containing wedding and engagement ring. Handsome reward. Call 929-0258. LOST: LARGE LIGHT GOLDEN MALE RETRIEVER. No collar, friendly. Answers to Socco. Last seen near Carolina Inn on Sunday, 102. Substantial reward. Call Coach Smith at 933 1154 or Scott Smith at 968-1037. transportation, fire and police protection, recreation programs and street mairrtainance were not equally provided among Carrboro residents. "Blacks and students were traditionally ignored when it came to the question of services," Patterson says. Patterson says transportation has become a crucial issue for the group. The coalition dominated town board voted to subsidize a bus route for Carrboro through an agreement reached with Chapel Hill last spring. Mary Riggsbee, an organizer of Allied Citizens of Carrboro, says her group differs sharply with the coalition's response to the town's transportation needs. "If the bus system were self-supporting and used self-maintaining roads, I'd support it," Riggsbee says. "But I'm not for a subsidized bus system and I think the citizens of Carrboro have shown they are opposed to a subsidized system also. "1 don't feci that people living on limited incomes should be burdened with another tax (to support the bus route)." "I don't feel that the local, stable, tax paying citizen of Carrboro is even recognized anymore," she says. "The aldermen sit and listen to the suggestions of the citizens of Carrboro and then turn right around and vote the opposite way." FOUND - LADIES watch on North Campus. To claim, call 929-7021. Miscellaneous COLLEGIATE RESEARCH PAPERS.' Thousands on file. All academic subjects. Send $1.00 for mail order catalog. Box 25918-Z, Los Angeles, Calif. 90025. (213) 477-8474. INSTA-COPY offset printing & quick copying while you wait. 100 satisfaction guaranteed. Check our fast service and bw price on these? work. Insta-copy, corner of Franklin & Columbia (over the Zoom). 929-2147 Roommates Needed NEED A ROOMMATE? Call 967-4652 after 4. Transportation FRENCH TRAVELLER needs a ride to New York during weekend 15 October. She helps to pay the gas. Call Sylvie 933-5886 morning and evening. WINSTON-SALEM. Riders wanted to help with expenses. Almost all week-ends. Call 942-5528 anytime. Pets FREE CATS! Males and females. Call Brenda 966 3381 during the day, at night 732-2718. Th Dally Tar Hott Is published by th Dally Tar Haft tl Board ol O tractors ol tha Unhrarally ol North Carolina dally Monday through Friday during tha regular acadatnlc yaw axoapt during axam parted, vacations and aummar assslons. Tha following dataa ara to ba only Saturday Issum: SapL 17, Oct 1, t, 22, Nov. S. Tha Sumntar Tar Had la publlshad weekly on Thursdays dur ing aummar sessions. Offices ara at Via Frank Porter Graham Student Union BuHdlng, University ol North Carolina, Chapel HIH, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: Newa, Sports (33-024S, 933-024, 933-0372; Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1163, 933-02S2. Subscription rate: by third class man, .12.50 par semester, 16.00 aummar only, $30.00 par year, by 1st class mall, $30.00 per semester, $5.00 aummar only, $69.00 par year. The Campos Governing Council ehaN have powers lo determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate al revenue derived Irom the Student Activities Fee (1.1.14 ol the Student Constitution). The Dally Tar Heel la a student organisation. The Dally Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone ol all advertisements and to revise or lurn away copy H considers objectionable. The Dally Tar Heel wKI not consider adjustments or pay ment lor any typographical errors or aftoneoua Insertion unless notice Is given to the Business Manager wtthm (1) one day attar the advertisement appears, within (1) one day ol receiving the tear eheets or aubacrlptlon ol the paper. The Dally Tar Heel win not be responsible tor more than one Incorrect Insertion ol an advertisement scheduled to run several times. Notice lor such correc tion must be given bet ore me nest Insertion. Verne Taylor, Business Manager Dan Collins, Sales Manager Blair Kleltsch, Advertising Manager

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