Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 29, 1978, edition 1 / Page 4
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4 The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday. August 291978 for "student Cainrapins Caieodlair Public service announcements must be turned 4n at the box outside the DfHoff ices in the Carolina Union by 1 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item will be run at le participation in project SCAU looking ACTIVITIES TODAY The Student Consumer Action Union asks alt interested persons to attend an organizational meeting at 4 p.m. in Room 207 Carolina Union. The Outinff Club will hold its first meeting at 7 p.m. in rooms 207-209 Carolina Union. Anyone interested iri the outdoors is welcome. The Association of International Students will hold its first meeting of 1978-79 at 7:30 p.m. 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 state, and a discussion session will follow. All interested women and men are invited to participate and help organize ERA informat:on. For further information, call 967-9251. extension 282. The UNC Water Polo Club will hold an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. in Room 213 Carolina Union. No experience necessary. Tournaments already scheduled. Everyone is' welcome. DI-PHI will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the DI Chamber 300 New 'West. All are welcome. The L'NC Young Democrats will hold hs first meeting at 8 p.m. in Room 213 Carolina Union. Free beer and coke will be served. Everyone is invited.- A workshop in clogging, running set and mountain circle dancing will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the basement of the Chapel of the Cross. All are welcome at this free event. Looking for a new experience? Try the 1979 YACKETY Y ACK. Staff persons interested in reporting, creative writing, photography, business, layout, sales, sports coverage, campus history, etc. are needed. Many coordinator positions still are available. Some jobs are open to inexperienced applicants. Enthusiasm is the main requirement. If you're interested, check out the organizational meeting at 8 p.m. in Room 100 Hamilton Hall. Auditions for the opening production of the New Paul Green Theatre will be held 7-10 p.m. today and Wednesday in the theatre. The opening production will be Paul Green 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 933-1 122. UPCOMING EVENTS The North Carolina Student Legislature will hold an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Room 213 Carolina Union. All old and new members should attend. The First Collegiate Bassmasters will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in 327 Ehrtnghaus Dorm. Anyone interested in fishing is invited. . - The UNC College Republicans wiU hold its first meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Room 207 Carolina Union. Meet local GOP candidates and enjoy a keg. Memberships available Tor Brothers and sisters of AXE Rho Chapter will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Kenan Laboratory lobby. Officers meet at 6:30 p.m. The CEEB Advanced Placement Test in French and Spanish will be given at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in 104 Howell Hall for those students who were unable to take it during registration. There will be no registration for the test. Students w ho wish to take the test should bring a check for $3 payable to UNC. , The Science Fiction and Fantasy Club will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday tn Room 308 Alumni Building.' The opening program will be "Alternate Dimensions in Science Fiction". All interested persons are invites. The Episcopal Campus Ministry eucharist will be at 10 p.m. Wednesday in the Chapel of the Cross. Coffee and doughnuts will be available in the student lounge afterwards. All arc welcome. Chapel Hill ECOS will hold its first organizational meeting of the semester at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Room 209 Carolina Union. Old members and anyone wishing Jo learn about or deal with any environmental issues are welcone. SIMS, the Students' International Meditation Society, is sponsoring two free introductory lectures on the 'Transcendental Meditation Program at noon and 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Room 215 C arolina Union. Guest lecturer will be Norman Zierold. For additional information call 967-7633. Beta Alpha Psi will hold an organizational meeting from 4 5:30 p.m. Wednesday in T-5 New Carroll Hall. All members are urged to attend. ITEMS OF INTEREST Sign-up sheets for Senior Class Advisory Committee are at the Carolina Union desk now until Friday. All interested seniors are urged to apply. World hunger exists in Chapel. Hill. If you're interested in working with other students on this issue, go by the Campus Y. Room 102 and sign up with the Hunger Action Committee. If you are interested in attending and or cooking for a Shabbat Dinner at 6:30 p.m. Friday, call 942-405? or go by the Hillel Foundation office. 210 W. Cameron Ave. Deadline for sign-up is 3 p.m. Thrusday. The Human Sexuality Information and Counseling Service now is accepting applications for volunteer peer counselors. Applications available at the Union information desk. For more information call 933-5505 Boxing and sparring instruction will be given at 3 p.m. every Sunday afternoon in the Wrestling Room, downstairs. Woollen Gym. Looking for a chance to become involved in community service? Volunteer as a tutor for elementary or junior high students in Chapel Hill. Applications available in Room 102 the Campus Y. Required orientation meeting at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. Sept. 19 in 08 Peabody Hall. Any student interested in serving as managers or statisticians for the INC Varsity Men's Lacrosse Team is asked to contact Coach Willie Scroggs in Room 118 Carmichael Auditorium. Medical College Admission Test will be administered Sept. 30 Applications must he 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 Predenl Premed Advising Office in 311 South Building or IIM Nash Hall (across from Carolina Inn parking lot). The Clef Hangers, 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 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 iellar Poor 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 MELAN1E SILL Staff Writer The officers of UNCs Student Consumer Action Union are calling for help. "We're looking for writers, surveyors, speech people anyone who's interested," said Debbie Gray, who handles SCAU's contact and education programs, complaint lines and new projects. Each year, SCAU publishes pamphlets designed to aid local consumers. "The Southern Part of Heaven", updated last spring, looks into apartments in Chapel Hill and Carrboro. Other publications include The Franklin Street Gourmet", a guide to local dining; "Wheeling and Dealinr " a bicycler's guide; "Consumer Health Handbook."' "Automotive Repair Guide -"'Cash a guide to local banking; '. and a merchants guide. Along with updating and adding to these publications. Gray said, SCAU has become more active in taking up causes for students. "Our. breadth of involvement depends upon student interest," Dan Coleman, SCAU vice chairperson said. "We're a' student-funded organization, and we need the students to decide how to spend their money. Our product is tangible. These pamphlets are not only something students can use,see and read, but also something they can contribute to." Projects planned for this year include a "Stereo and Camera Guide", a comparison of prices among local stores, an updated Servomatibn study and a wallet-sized card with "How to complain" on one side and "What to do when you're stopped by a policeman" on the other. , "We need workers," Coleman said. "We need people to go from store to store with lists and compare prices, meal planners to help with the Servomation study just people willing to give effort and time." SCAU's 1978-79 organizational meeting will be held at 4 p.m. today in Room 207 Carolina Union. L-. t1 : Applicants for the 1978-79 Toronto Exchange program may pick up .applications and sign up for interviews !at the Carolina Union information desk beginning Wednesday, committee spokesperson Eric Vernon announced Monday. ? Interested persons are urged to submit their applications before the Sept. 8 deadline. Interviews will be JiekUhe weekjofJSfpt. 7. All'students registered at UNC are eligible to apply. lion forms now available iioronto en 3k The Toronto Exchange was" organized 18 years ago by UNC : President William Friday and Clause BisseL president of the University of Toronto., Each November, a delegation of Canadian students" travels to Chapel Hilt for a week of cultural interaction with their Carolina counterparts. The UNC students visit Toronto in J January. - Questions may be referred to Cindy Blanke at 929-5829 or Chip Ensslin at '929-0009. if o rV' Lrt V . OTH Allen Jemigan Trees outline sunbathers behind Mclver. dorm ADA. lacks staff members vfnr rxnrvn r - mass umDD LJ bUVLJI bdJ, UaiS LJ. For freshmen and new students especially, going without personal wheels means the bus is more than a welcome convenience. It's a necessity. And for the thousands of folks who live at South Campus and other faraway places, nothing beats the bus for hauling home a small library of books, transporting sevejral bags of canned goods from some stqplidr simply going out for a night on the town. When vou re late for class v . and still far away, those hills and valleys between you and class can get awful steep! Unless you take a bus. On the campus bus route, yoM're never more than five minutes from any stop on the line. VVI bn it comes to beating those hills, the bus really makes the grade, 2QQ G2 Going without a car doesn't mean you can't get around. With a bus you can travel' just about anywhere in the village, take along as many friends as you want and not worry about driving home with one too many under your belt. And if you want to go on Sundays and nights, there's Shared-Ride Taxi, a service to bus pass holders that combines taxi convenience with bus rates for the best of both worlds. . '3S3 oseweo' Coot! o ISzds. Our drivers know exactly where they're going, even if you don't. And they don't mind answering your ques tions, when there's someplace you want to go. If you really want to learn the village, there's no easier way than cruising it by bus. mi mi Si u ' When you trade your bag of nickels for a bus pass, ' you can ride unencumbered for a whole year. No fumb .ling for exact change; no cards to punch. Just flash you r pass and you're home free. Compared to $84 for a parking permit, a bus pass is a classic case of more for less. And you don't spend your day and your temper hunting for a parking place or fighting rush hour traffic. If you plan to stay around here for four years, the bus will help get you off to a good start. So give us a call when you get to town. We're at 942-5174. Remember, semesters come and go, but the bus will nsvet fail you. " , .... . nMMMITV TDAMOIJ Information Mt.mhor 947-B174 CHAPEL HILL COIVlfViUIXJiTY TRAIMSIT I !- ..i.jl;-'-uaVt Apartment dwellers. That large group of expatriated students who live off campus. Like all students, apartment dwellers encounter occasional problems. But unlike dorm residents, apartment dwellers don't have hall- or suite-mates and RAs to help with their problems. They don't even have anyone to arrange social activities for them. Until now. Apartment dwellers now have the named Association of Apartment Dwellers. An organization which began about a year ago under the auspices of Student Government, AAD has become independent and is formulating plans to make life a little easier for apartment residents. But AAD is having problems of its won, especially in the area of staff. AAD has two members its co-coordinators, Lyndon Fuller and Cary Ulman and two arenU enough to carry out its projects. ' "We don't have any staff to speak of," Ulman says. "Right now our main interest is in getting people to work for the association." Students interested in participating in AAD may leave a message for Ulman or Fuller at the Student Government office in Suite C Carolina Union. Once the staff is recruited, Ulman says he plans to have plenty for them to do. Projects include a special phone directory for persons in apartments; ride and carpool coordination; pamphlets on legal situations related to apartment living and efforts to support the beleaguered C-bus route. . "This is a program for folks who aren't in frats or sororities or dorms," Ulman said. "Those people need someone to look out for their interests, and that's what we'll try to do." Fall Newsmaker for Tuesday. . . DDS(D0U Razzle dazzle yourself, a boogie and drink, iall you; want from "j? 8:30 - 10:00 Dress to Impress Below Zoom Zoom mHQOJLE THE Daily Crossword by Stanley B. Whrtten 1 5 ACROSS Summit Mulberry barks 10 Mathematic probability 14 Plunder 15 Broom of the comics 16 Simpleton 17 1.414... 20 Row 21 One who pampers 22 Unity 23 Play on , words 24 Grouped: abbr. 25 Ward off 27 Alarm 29 Provincial 33 Beverages 37 1,002 in Roma 38 Stow in a ship's hold 39 About 41 Snooze ' 43 Consumed 44 Flynnand others 46 Pull 48 Headway 49 Effect 50 Grieg's ' Death" 52 Athletic group 54 Four-in-hand 55 Seize 58 Haggard novel 61 Printing process 63 Col. subj. 64 Raise (cube) 67 Exclamation of grief 68 A Ford 69 Actor Bruce 70 Zone 71 Daily record 72 River in Central Europe DOWN 1 Stewart or Joseph 2 vin . 3 Grieve 4 Travel initials 5 Math propo sition 6 Construc tion pas sage 7 Trudge 8 Hitler Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 9 Lustrous fabrics 10 Before beat or color 11 death (kill) 12 Depressed 13 Blackthorn 18 Mil. grp. up north 19 Lavish 26 Be afraid of 28 Ranch rope 30 Network of nerves 31 Stove part 32 Left 33. Genus of maples 34 Money for . Sophia 35 Goes awry MAlAHnALlTlAlRriWANTf AilA-lIill-Aiii ilA-L L I N G e "nTv E o. jp e A N T HS.JJ.E S J. D eJaJs :L- A jl a s,I 1. a jje. -JL L HI .S T E.E N T hL A.j.0.5 M 0 0 RE, A A A MALE tTl A U V I N I S T S s Ji A A .i. 1. e ilif, "t ar x.k.E..s s li a x v Jr s . r, ... jo j He I c. ji j. o A S P jc ilAs0B M X l L 0 RTtT H'o"urrT 2. H.H.L A L JLEjT L L LT. REA0 j T I W 1 E I E TtJ E R LE" 36 40 42 45 47 51 53 55 56 57 58 59 60 62 65 66 Reconnoiter Assert Began Uncannily Ooze Muslim messiah Upright post Sour Carried Use a dirk Predicament Lat. abbr. Passport endorsement FDR's veep Pindaric work 82978 i p n p tts p p n r no 111.112 113 TS Ts ! TT- : , - tsr " 19"' ' 20 21 ' " r 22"-" I J-J jj - i$r ixryryr iTiryprirgr n is 1 3 ; m xr' w rrr" " 55 T" L .y, ST ST" S3 &i -55 S7 ' " oB " l H I 1 1 1 V1 1 1 1 1978 by Chicago Tribune-N.Y. Naws Synd. Inc. All Rights Reserved 82978
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 29, 1978, edition 1
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