4 ' Thp Daily Tar Heel Thtiisj.iy Movnnucr 3 1977 Publick Knc By GRANT HA MILL J 0 j 4 A - J ilftmaiiiaiMJ siftNav-Ww. v-WvvaSfoiv . .sj Bragg Cox Equal rights for lizard. .. It's m inipiti;nii plank in the wooden platform ol the I NC ' student u ho is a candidate lor the I'.S. Senate. Other important planks in candidate Jerome Jeromr't platform are initial funding for Meswick Van Booshure's School for the Weird, interplanetary communication with the coneheads and a boiling frog in every mailhox. Most of Jerome's campaigning takes place at the Estes Road stoplight on Franklin Street. He and his campaign workers sip cold beer and talk to the people who stop at the light. "We're just trying to perk up the people in that rush hour traffic." said Buck Wells, Jerome's alter ego. "We do it to keep things light, but we do have 268 hard-core votes for the Senate." Wells continued. Larry Carpenter But senator is not the only position Jerome is seeking. A position in the U.S. House of Representatives as a legislator of an errand boy would be acceptable if available. Wells said. Jerome stays in shape by playing nocnavvi with his campaign workers. Jimmy Wright and John Cherry. Nocnavvi, Wells explained, is similar to handball except that it is played in the kitchen and the loser has to drink a Red. White and Blue beer. Wells plans to enliven Oklahoma after this campaign is over, he said, adding that folks out there take life too seriously. The only problem with the campaign so far. Wells said, is Jerome's wooden platform: What about termites? Devil's ground ... Near Siler City there is an eerie circle where nothing grows and objects left on the bare earth overnight allegedly get pushed to the edge ol the circle. It's the Devil's tramping ground, and even tree limbs won't grow over it. said Bragg Cox, Fhringhaus resident adviser. Cox should know he and 14 other Ehringhaus residents camped there last weekend. "It was too eerie to talk about," Cox recalled. "And we want people to go find out for themselves." Cox said the group spent the night singing and playing guitars around a campfire that was mysteriously hard to light. If you have the urge to spend a night out. it would probably be more interesting than a motel. Journey into the past . . . It was like the South of years ago. Larry Carpenter said of his recent trip to South Africa. Carpenter, a former national president of the Explorer Scouts, went to South Africa to attend the Wilderness Leadership School., The school, started by professional golfer Gary Player's brother. Ian. teaches wilderness conservation to high school and college students from all over the world. Although Carpenter's visit there wasn't political in nature, he made some observations on the political situation. The segregated restrooms reminded him of the segregated South of years past, he said. Blacks stepped off the sidewalk to allow whites to pass, he continued. " I he whites there live very well. They're like a ruling class." Carpenter said all the blacks he saw in the cities were members of the working class. White South Africans were very defensive about apartheid. Carpenter said, and the tension was real, ev en though in Johannesburg you could go all day without seeing a policeman. Bathroom bash. ..When jhe oldest women's dorm on campus finally got new bathroom facilities in its old wings, more than 30 young women and a few housing department officials 1 decided to celebrate. Russell I'erry. director ol housing operations, attended, as did Spencer Resident Director Penny Rue. Rue probably wished she had skipped the affair, as she was thrown, fully dressed, into a shower shortly alter the ribbon was cut. Rue thus became the first to use the new bathing facilities. "The rooms were closed all of last year because ol leaking." Rue said. "We're happy now that the rooms have been fixed up." I he decor includes tiled walls and floors, new plumbing fixtures and gray marble shower stalls. "It look a long time to get the marble." Rue said. Total cost of the renovation was S.W.UOO. During the celebration, snacks were served from sparkling new sinks, and the bathtub was christened with libations of champagne poured in honor of the great god of cleanliness. - ROBERT THOMASON Overseas internship meeting Friday Students interested in finding overseas job internships in their specialty should attend a meeting of the International Association of Students of Economics and Business Management (AIESEC) at I p.m. Friday in room 21 3-B Old Carroll Hall. The purpose ol-AIESEC is to match students interested in working overseas with job openings in foreign businesses. Since its inception in France soon after World War II, AIESEC has provided more than 6,500 American students with jobs. EWMG GARDEN restaurant eniov Chinese food in th Yvm Winner of the 1404 Ent Franklin Strut e death of oriental culture Franklin Street Gourmet "Choice Award" Over 100 dishes Gourmet food from all four corners of China Private party rooms available Dine amid the art of China 7 DAYS - Linen 11 tjn. to 2 p.m. DVintr 5 pjn. to 10 p.m. ( Opn III 11 p.m. Thl FoalbtH Saturday 942-1613 Sit J Univtnlty Grants The Chapel Hill chapter was begun in early 1977 by a group of business students, but the program is open to all students regardless of major. Lenka Newmann, AIESEC executive board member and director of exchange, says one of the main functions of AIESEC students is to contact state businesses and find possible internship openings lor foreign students. "Each student has to earn his own internship by working lor the organization," Neumann says. "It's a 50-50 thing to get an internship, a student finds one for an overseas student." The average AIESEC internship lasts between three and 18 months. Photographer needed The Daily Tar Heel needs an experienced photographer to work weekends. Applicants need to have darkroom experience and their own equipment. Bring a portfolio by the DTH office, in the Carolina Union, or contact Allen Jernigan there. Advertise in the Tar Heel Hillel Foundation presents the tirst in a series of Friday night lectures: DAVID HALPERIN Professor of Judaic Studies at UNC speaking on THE SABBATH IN ANCIENT JUDAISM Friday, November 4 at 9:15 p.m. 210 W. Cameron Avenue Shabbos dinner at 6:30 p.m. (please sign up by noon on Friday) Services at 8:00 p.m. For information on other Hillel activities Call 942-4057 Live Tonight Southern Express ALL ABC PERMITS Free Keg 8:00 - 9:00 Wl Mirltiliilll III n Members $1.50 Guests $2.00 THE Daily Crossword by Ann V. Jenkins ACROSS 1 Italian food 6 Dress for Indira 10 Rampant 14 Regions 15 "Mash" man 16 Town on the ThBmes 17 Skull cavity 18 Before fall or fill 19 Covenant 20 Fiery wrangles 23 Restyled 24 State: abbr. 25 Hwy. 26 Electric burner 31 Morning moisture 34 Malign 36 Utah lilies Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: AlTllwff slMlAlRi"TTPIE lNlp s 1 1 . iXi HL 0 41 ILL ll L :iiiF N A 3T H PjLJj u U, T E R R I E R 5 S? P 0 TTT uV j r a Tei i h ii Sail v 7 I V .! N. S T F I V E i ffi A w r Irir fl .- TT 0 TTf 0 N. jiJ3 Hi. E N T LyZZ ME i vjG p. a Tjrrb a, m u re;" jo o n ae ou s F 7 e nc o h i i r E VF N I L L i M 1 E 1 1 y 1 . 11 punt fcj w I r 1 ) st"Uf l to I w" 1137; 37 Jejune 39 Casa rooms 41 Rusk or Meminger 42 State borders 44 Barbara or Clara 46 SHAEF man's initials 47 Refriger ated items 49 Mel of base ball 51 Fruit punch 52 Rooms for sunbaths 56 Snubbing 61 in one's bonnet 62 Goidelic 63 "Thereby hangs " 64 Certain horse 65 Nautical term 66 Bristles 67 Initial progress 68 Rolltop 69 Cafeteria equipment DOWN 1 Titled Turk 2 Gazelle 3 Fr. legis lature 4 Less slack 5 Avouches 6 Dinner course 7 Winglike 8 Tolled 9 Swear in, as a Gl 10 Opposed authority 11 Lay (flatter) 12 Source 13 Extremities 21 Considers 22 Mercator's items 26 Football's George 27 Port in Africa 28 Like fine wine rT2 IJ V 5 j"4i ) IB 9 T"li6 III lu 1 1 3 T? T? T5 T7 T5 TJ 73 ST" iT ,.M.IMi,w, ' is ; inrr brnrnr 3Tt3Tj--T5 if 15 71 jf-!55 STl-in sr srs ' " in M"' l"i sTTirTsr- l.pMH,- - WW ! w !o i io !9 oO n rs? "S3 ! 1 I j68 1 I 1 j j69 1 1 1 1 29 Amphibian 30 Laborer way back 31 Surrealist painter 32 Sevareidor Portman 33 Oenophile's beverage 35 Adroitness 38 Like a debauchee 40 Tolerated 43 Foam 45 In any case 48 Decapitate 50 Sharper to the taste 52 Smooth and shiny 53 Rancher's rope 54 Stud a sur face with gems 55 Author James and family 56 One of fifty-two 57 Reed 58 Spare 59 Heraldic border 60 Puts to work Amity JLolnl T SEMINARS OCTOBER-TEST PROGRAMS BEGIN SEPTEMBER 23, 24, AND 30. Taking the Law Boards this October or December? Thorough preparation requires Amity's unique personal approach. Why face the exam alone when you can have Amity's team of test specialists on your side? Consider the resources of the nation's most student-oriented preparation for the LSAT: CONVENIENT WEEKEND SCHEDULING CLOSE TO EACH LSAT TEST DATE Intensive courses arranged to avoid conflict with academic schedules. Systematic, strategy-minded instruction with integrated practice testing. Separate classes in each subtest area focus attention on the special requirements of each test section. NATION'S MOST SPECIALIZED TEAM-TEACHING APPROACH The most expert test instruction available, because each instructor is a specialist in the LSAT area he teaches. Each student works with five different instructors, specializing in writing, logic, business judgment, math, and legal reasoning. 12-STUDENT AVERAGE CLASS SIZE More individual attention and involvement than in any other course. The nation's best student faculty ratio. Small seminar classes have a guaranteed maximum of 18 students (and an average class size of 12). Instructors give constant careful attention to individual questions, problems, and analysis of errors. CONTINUALLY-UPDATED CURRICULUM A teaching curriculum wholly revised for the 1977 78 testing year, reflecting the substantial changes in LSAT content. Challenging practice material, concentrating on the upper half of the LSAT's range of question difficulty, best prepares students for the rigors of the exam. To receive complete local schedule Information and our detailed course description - without cost or obligation -call toll-free to leave your name and address: 800-243-4767 Kxt. 761 '-Amity Testing Institute We make tests a little easier to take. I mm- Women 's study curriculum now more significant at UNC By BF.RME RANSBOTTOM Staff W riter Women's Studies is an interdisciplinary studies major plagued by identity problems lew people know the program exists and most who do are unsure about what it really is. But Mary Turner Lane, director of Women's Studies, and her slowly growing staff are working to make the program an integral and expanding facet of the University curriculum. Women's Studies at UNC got its earliest beginnings four years ago with a Faculty Council study to determine the need for such a program. Actual development of Women's Studies as an interdisciplinary major did not begin until fall 1976. Two new courses to be added this spring will bring the total number of courses focusing entirely on the study of women, gender or sex roles to be offered next semester to nine. These two additions are a significant step forward for the program. Lane says. The two new courses to be offered are Honors 30 (Women in Management) and Women's Studies 50 (Introduction to Women's Studies), the first course to be offered here under the title of "Women's Studies." Other course offerings include Anthropology 99 (Culture and Gender Roles), History 90 (Women and War) and Special Studies 90 (Leader Styles and Models for Women). A complete list of course offerings is available in the interdisciplinary studies office on the third floor of South Building. "We've tried to pull together existing courses dealing with women because we already had professors doing research in these areas and encouraging the development of new courses," Lane says. "If I had people knocking on the door, the program would be well on its way," she says. "But we're still trying to identify this program for students. "This is the first year we've even been listed in the catalog." The directors of Women's Studies have several projects underway to increase student awareness of both the program and the changing roles of women on campus. board Continued trom page 1 . I he I ixed-route bus service last spring served about 9t) persons a night. lerry l.athrop. board chairperson, said eliminating night service is not a viable alternative. "I think everybody is interested in some form of iiight service." he said. "I really hate to see us screw around with it (the taxi service) too much until we know more about it." board member Gorman Gilbert said. "1 think we have to educate the people that this is a reliable service." "1 think we ought to continue the marketing program." said board member Paul Arne. student transportation director. "II this doesn't work to improve ridership, we ought to seriously consider dropping the 25-cent surcharge." l.athrop pointed out that reinstating fixed-route bus service would result in an increase in the total cost of providing night service. "It (the shured-ride taxi service) is better Irom the town's prespective." l.athrop said. "Although we're not hauling as many people, we're not spending as much money." "One of the reasons 1 was for shared-ride taxi serv ice was to answer criticisms that we were running empty buses up and down the streets." board member Phil McGill said. "I Water use up Water consumption in Chapel Hill and Carrboro has risen since mandatory water controls were lifted last Friday an increase greater than authorities would like. Consumption has been creeping up, according to W. H. Cleveland, assistant director of the Orange Water and Sewer Authority (OWASA). OWASA reported that consumption Tuesday was 4.9 million gallons, 0.5 million gallons more than the previous Tuesday. Although 5 million gallons a day might be a normal consumption, Cleveland said, OWASA would prefer a daily consumption of 4.6 million gallons. "We are going to continue to stress voluntary water conservation," Cleveland said. The water level of University Lake has remained constant this week at 29.5 inches below capacity. writ thought this was an answer to that." "The people I'm concerned about are the people who need night service, not just those who decide to ride on a whim." McGill said. Continued from page 1 student lees nv the Black Student Movement (BSM) as it only admitted black students at the time. That part of the suit was dismissed in the lower courts, though, when the BSM opened its membership to all students. The first student body president to exercise the appointment power was Billy Richardson in the spring of I976. Student Body President Bill Moss said, "Everything is in limbo until we hear from the Supreme Court. Technically we are abiding by the Fourth Circuit Court decision." Speas said it was impossible to tell if the Supreme Court w ould hear the case, adding, "They do not take many of these." The Supreme Court will make a decision on whether to review the case after opinions have been filed by Uzzell and Arrington. Conveniently located distribution boxes are just 41 Good Reasons to pick up your DTH today and everyday Hackney's has White Stag White Stag skiwear... jackets, bibbers, vests. For men, women and children. In dozens of sun-bright colors and color combinations. In great new 1977 styles. When you look for skiwear.. .look to Hackney's for White Stag. for people who ski j University Mall Chapel Hill Raleigh Wherever You Go... i I U .'Wf' Traoe-marK IVfcofever You l J? Take Coke Along! The most popular relresher . , . Il goes camping, boating, fishing, traveling, and loves those leisure hours . . . and so do you! Hove A Coke and remember everything nice 3 DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.

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