4 The Daily Tar Heel Monday, August 28. 1978 . Cap'pps CaPesmdair . Public service announcement mutt be turned -In at the box outside the DTH off ices in the Carolina Union by 1 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each Hem will be run at least twice. Bike race attracts celebrities ACTIVITIES TODAY Th Fencing Team organizational meeting will be held at 5 p.m. in Room 304 Woolien Gym. All returning team member and those interested in trying out should attend. ' The Carolina Union Performing. Arts Committee will meet at 4 p.m. Check the Carolina Union Desk for room number. All members and interested parties should attend. All interested persons are urged to attend The I.E. Speech Team meeting at 7 p.m. in 103 Bingham. The 1978-79 Union Social Committee will meet at 9 p.m. in Room 206 Carolina Union. All interested persons are asked to come by for a short introduction. The Carolina Gay Association will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. Check the Union information desk for room number. Plans for the upcoming year will be discussed. The UNC Karate Club and the American Tat Kwon Do Association will hold an introductory meeting at 7 p.m. in 21$ Carolina Union. Everyone i welcome at this free event. Anyone interested in working with WXYC, Carolina's student radio station, in any aspect (news, music, promotions, engineering) should attend the general staff meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Room 213 Carolina Union. If you cannot attend, come by the station before the meeting and talk with Gary Davis, station manager. Auditions for the opening production of The New Paul Green Theatre will be held 7-10 p.m today through Wednesday in the theater. The opening production will be Paul Green's and Richard Wright's Native Son. Audition materials will be provided. A copy of the script is at the reserve desk of the undergraduate library. For more information call 933-1122. UPCOMING EVENTS The Student Comsuiner Action Union asks all interested persons to attend an organizational meeting at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Room 207 Carolina Union. The Outing Club will hold its first meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday in rooms 207-209 CaroKna Union. Anyone interested m the outdoors is welcome. The Association of International Student will hold its first meeting of 1978-79 at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the International Center. Bynum Hall. All interested American and foreign students are invited to attend. An organizational meeting of "ERA Information" will be held at 7:30 p.m. at the Presbyterian Student Center. 1 10 Henderson St., Chapel Hill. Speakers will discuss briefly what is happening in the stole, and a discussion session will follow. AU interested women and men are invited to participate and iicip imuu-: tiMiMUMUon. im luriner inlormalion. caU 967-9251. extension 282. The UNC Water Polo Club will hold an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Room 213 Carolina Union. No experience necessary. Tournaments already scheduled. Everyone is welcome. , DI-PHI will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Dl Chamber. 300 New West. AU are welcome. The UNC Young Democrats will hold its first meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Room 213 Carolina Union. Free beer and coke will be served. Everyone is invited. A workshop in dogging, running set and mountain circle dancing will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the basement of the Chapel of the Cross. AU are welcome at this free event. Looking for a new experience? Try the 1979 YAC KETY YACK staff. People interested in reporting, creative writing, photography, business, layout, sales, sports coverage, campus history, etc. are needed. Many coordinators' positions still are available. Some jobs are open to inexperienced applicants. Enthusiasm is the mam requirement. If you're interested, check out the organizational meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Room 100 Hamilton Hall. ITEMS OF INTEREST Any student interested in serving as managers or statisticians for the UNC Varsity Men's Lacrosse Team arc asked to contact Coach Willie Scroggs in Room 118 Carmichael Auditorium. Medical College Admission Test will be administered Sept. 30. Applications must be postmarked by Sept. I (absolutely no late applications). Last chance to take this test for admission to medical schools in fall 1979. Pick up applications and 1978-79 Update to "Predent-Premed Preview Review" at Predent Premed Advising Office in 311 South Building or 101 Nash Hall (across from Carolina Inn parking lot). The Clef Hanger, a campus close harmony-barbershop group, has openings for several new members. Interested students (with voices between tenor and bass) should contact Barry Saunders at 933-6125 as soon as possible. APO Book Co-op sales continue through from 9 a.m. -4 p.m. Wednesday in Rooms 202-204 of the Carolina Union. The Cellar Door. UNCs literary magazine, is seeking new staff members. Applications are available at the Cellar Door office on the second floor of the Campus Y and at the Union information desk. They are due Sept. 12 at the Y. Anyone interested in working for the Committee on Undergraduate Education should sign up in the Campus Y office or call Richard Bostic at 933-4283. By CAROL HANNER and STEVE HUETTELL Staff Writers . Horsepower took a back scat to leg power in downtown Cafrboro Sunday as cyclists from up and down the East Coast competed for $ 1 .500 in prize money in the Second Annual Carrboro Criterium. Police blocked off a three-quarter mile oval of East Franklin and West Main streets, arid spectators cheered on the racers while swilling beer and basking in the hot afternoon sunshine. The event, sponsored by the Carrboro Business Association and Tumbleweed Cyclery, was sanctioned by the U.S. Cycling Federation and run by the Carolina Velo Club. Celebrities, novices and USCF women, seniors, juniors and veterans competed in separate races of varied lengths. The main event of the day was the 45 mile USCF seniors race, won by five-time state cycling champion Ronnie Hanson of Raleigh. State Senator McNeil Smith of Greensboro won the 1.5-mile celebrity race over a field which included radio -personalities Pat Patterson and rBernie Lassiter of WQDR and Ron Stutz of WCHL, and Chapel Hill Alderman Gerry Cohen. Coordinators of the event said the race drew some of the area's top racers, including several who had. placed well in national and international competition. "The field was real good today we had some great races." Pete Sim-. - of the organizers, said. Bicycle racing as a spectator sport is growing in the nation particularly in the Midwest, California and New England and North Carolina has the strongest competition in the South, Simpson said. Attendance for this year's race was better than last year and helped spark interest in the sport, he said. "I invited a bunch of friends who are tradespeople around here, but not previously into racing," he said. "They were ecstatic -- they just couldn't imagine these guys pumping away for two hours." But pump they did despite the tortuous heat, which had even spectators retreating to shady spots to cool down. "The heat was definitely a factor," senior winner Ronnie Hanson said. A lot of times I just had to slow down to cool off." Hanson, whose 1977 accomplishments included a fourth place finish in the prestigious Tour De L'Abitibi in Quebec, Canada and winning nearly $6,000 on the USFC tour, will make a bid next year to win one of the eight spots on the 1980 U.S. Oympic team. "The three coaches will invite 20 people each from the East, Midwest and West, and then the 60 will get together for a week of racing to decide who the final eight will be. "The Americans are definitely becoming stronger in world competition. and I'm to do my best to race in th Olympics in Moscow. Then I'm going back to school you just don't have the time to do that when you're racing." . Hanson now works a mid-day job at his father's gas station in Raleigh and trains for an hour in the morning and evening. "1 ride about 20 miles before work and miles afterwards each day," he said. "I've been slacking off lately though. Earlier this summer I was doing about 350 miles ' a week. "For distance work, I ride from Raleigh to Chapel Hill about 70 miles. But I ride all over in Cary, Apex and . most everywhere. It's really nice, watching the scenery with a pair of radio headphones around my neck." Hanson's favorite training grounds, however, are the North Carolina mountains. "In the mountains you have to go slow because of the roads it really gives you a chance to take in all the scenery," he said. For local cruising, Hanson prefers Chapel Hill to the hustle and bustle of Raleigh. "Everybody rides a bike here (in Chapel Hill)," he said. "I just wish Chapel Hill would move to Raleigh there they - honk at you, run you off the road and yell that you shouldn't even be on the road. "In Chapel Hill there's a lot more respect for bikers. It's definitely the best spot in the state for a biker." n X X i ill: N 4 fc . s -5 a i - Mm 1 Hi DTHBi!ty Newman S. Columbia Street repaved Tuesday I , ads3s J The ENTERTAINMENT AMUSEMENT CO PRESENTS IN CONCERT A Unique Concert In The Round On A Revolving Stage Sound By Clair Bros. Audio .Lighting By Tait Towers Lighting, Inc. THURSDAY, SEPT. 14, 8 PM TICKETS ON SALE NOW. $9 00 & $8 00 ALL SEATS RESERVED COLISEUM BOX OFFICE AUTHORIZED BELK OUTLETS RALEIGH CIVIC CENTEM ANDREZNICKS WINSTON SALEM " CERTIFIED CHECKS OR MONEY OHDFP ONL r ENCLOSE S 50 FOP POSTAGE AND HANDl ING CAU FOR INFORMATION ?94 2870 j GREENSBORO COLISEUM Road construction will force drivers to. detour South Columbia Street Tuesday as a stretch of the road from the Carolina? Inn to South Road is resurfaced. The work is partof the resurfacing of several state roads in Chapel Hill. The N.C. Division of Highway, plans to continue work for several weeks. Chapel Hill Police Chief Herman Stone said traffic barricadeswill he put . up at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday. They will be . removed after completion of the resurfacing late Tuesday afternoon. Temporary bus stops have been established for riders. Riders should call 942-5174 for information about stops. Chief Stone suggested drivers use two routes to avoid the closed section of South Columbia Street: Pittsboro Street, which connects South Columbia to Cameron Avenue. For northbound drivers only, Raleigh Street will provide access from South Road to Cameron Avenue and Franklin Street. .' Wednesday, state contractors are expected to start resurfacing South Road, working to the east from me South Columbia intersection toward the Orange County line. . ,. t p iiifc-'iSf r SABLACK'S HEROES AND DELI 1 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! Just beyond the Post Office on Franklin St. Open 11 A.M. 1 A.M 929-7202 i m rv rr m - i -f j i l. w u' m ill" w it w ii vxciyiii -w TAKE OUT! Call ahead for faster service 929-7290 'j(i,a fjn For The Record Wrong Day The Daily Tar Heel incorrectly reported Thursday the University Baptist Church would hold a dinner to welcome . students to Chapel H ill Aug. 26 following ' the morning service. That dinner is scheduled for Sept. 10. The DTH regrets any inconvenience that resulted from the error. - Omissions In a story o tlining Student Government and its services Thursday, the DTH failed to include District 18 in a list of CGC districts. District 18, which consists of Berkshire Manor, Chateau Apts.,--Fidelity Court, Kingswood, Northhampton West and Annex, Old Well, Royal Park, the Villages and Yum Yum apartments is represented by Lyndon Fuller, D-l Old Well Apartments, 967-7317. Also, Yvette Holmes, not Traci LeGette and Vanessa Lea, is director of Residence Affairs and only three of the five Student Supreme Court positions are open. The other positions are held by Roy . iCooper and Shauna Lee. ! I 1 ' Dear Fellow Students, THE HONOR CODE "It shall be the responsibility of every student at the University of North Carolina to obey the Honor Code, which prohibits lying, cheating, or stealing...." i: (919) 929-2473 '.J For one hundred and two years the Honor Code of the University of North Carolina has worked to insure a system of fair grading for all students. All institutions try to minimize cheating, but UNC has an honor code and an honor court that are administered by the students themselves this is the feature which distinguishes your honor system. As a result, you have the responsibility to take an active role in upholding the honor code and working for its fair application. The honor code works. But in the few cases where cheating occurs, the Instrument of Student Judicial Governance deals effectively with violators. Indeed, the normal punishment for a first offense recently was changed from probation to suspension. Penalties are severe under the honor system, but most students welcome the opportunity they are given to begin making the moral decisions, day after day, which will determine who they are and who they will become in four years, in forty years. You can easily appreciate how important honesty, integrity, .and responsibility are in any system where people work hard and compete for distinction. You deserve a fair and honorable system and you should demand it your college years, the decisions you make, and the principles you adopt will remain with you forever. 431 Xh TrtonQla't SMngad Instrumnt SJp Planty af FrM Parkfog West franklin St. Cbapel HID, N.C427514 5? I v. Mda If petr Bor J jfl tr .ji Wdisurri D-l5 Acou&tic Guitar with Harcl Shield Gaoe HiMiWW Mu Retail Value: $284 i n UlvV Register atpxbo w JMusiC; ty 6:00 pm August 31st 4 OxoMw MUsic 44 RstrW 91 36i7ip7i Jri yites you to a TWtsday, Msgustl st in the it's tr'-t Sincerely yours, music. at R- MfmdMte no low m xJXDOWi music zioreM: i ne i Oxfr&w m SiamRevieW m AnOi trie guitar grawirrg wiii peineia 00 pm pun rig the party, P ferity owour beieraae will be available, n: I I l;l!iM!i Iff: V: ii U H U - 4 i ? v vl. i f : W hi V:i 0:2ii6Vi Music V n gs arolai lA'fraioicuoxarastiiv one m ;-i!!!Am MM iM U) : ; I M ; ::

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