f ' -: Mc-?vjv. January 15. 1S79 'Ilt""li v "f-iiiHf i science school muy boost universities News ooi Sod? r? j:m m MMti 1 - - .v. O r. SvSool of Science '' : i v v v hrJuVd to open in : ; 1,,'ici Iv.Hor gifted high ' ' ':r,i.h; tcccn cJ praise from , -.:: vr the Mate and some of pr p crt feel ihc benefits may u- tve .:.ite s. umtr$Uics. I "V tSe school is a great thing. vi. .J 1 h.-rr. a 1 venhour, chairperson of the VNC vv rvstrv department. I ould v v-pc tu.a ;f the schcvM is set up right, that a cou'J verve as a model for public ,vH across the state. Uer.our said he saw only benefits in i ? pro'ect. He said there was a possiblity graJv.ato from the school would be viravn to area universities 1 certainly think this type of school is a good idea." added William Smith, ch.urpcrson of the UNC mathematics department. Smith said the school would gnc exceptional students an excellent opportunity to develop their potential. Smith said he felt many North Carolina students could take advantage of the school. "There are many students ho have completed high school courses and take courses at a university early," he pointed out. Although the school will concentrate on preparing students to continue in math and science fields, it also will provide them with outstanding coverage in all fields, said Quentin Lindsey, an adviser to Gov. Jim Hunt on science and public pofTcy. "The difference in our curriculum will be to give the people an opportunity to go beyond the usual requirements in math and science," Lindsey said. If, however, the student wishes to pursue some other field we want to him to be well prepared." NCNB PLAZA across from Blimpies 967-4439. H H ! rasp 2 PIZZAS 1 After 5 p.m. with Presentation of this Ad. Offer Good Thru Jan. 31, 1978 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTSHIFT I I it iii inr 1 1 BacHx To Aon rnT) (Rra?n GFS A aTJ ECS... IT'S A CUIUS ess... o urs a cesoss esse i'S all e:j o::: du:l mi vjnnn ue::g specials The controversy rages on. Some argue it's a slaw dog, while a few contend it's a chili dog. Others insist it's a cheese dog, surrounded by fresh ly-chopped onions, fresh, creamy cole slaw, mustard and topped with extra meaty chili. Decide for yourself when you visit your Wiener King K restaurant. We think you'll agree our Wiener King Special is something else! And when you order, present this coupon and receive a second Wiener King Special Free. This way you'll have twice the enjoyment as you decide whether our special is, indeed, something else. At Wiener King, we believe it's simply a matter of taste. A tasty offer that really makes the grade! aaaaaannoooannann GOV I 5 Plesse present this coupon before ordering. Limit one coupon 0 per customer. Void where prohibited by law. Coupon good through Jan. ' ' '' 118 E. Franklin St. p n The idea for the science and math school originally camcTrom John Ehle, a Durham novelist and former faculty member at UNC. Plans for the project got underway in 1977. Funding for the school will come from a variety of sources, Lindsey said. The Watts Hospital building in Durham, valued at S6 million, has been donated to house the school. "There are six major areas of funding," Lindsey said. "They are the local community, private corporations, private citizens, private foundations, federal agencies and the state General Assembly. As you can see, we won't be relying heavily on stated money. 1 say total state money would be significantly less than 50 percent." Lindsey said he is hopeful the school will be able to provide free tuition. "It is our intent that no qualified student that has been admitted be turned away because of financial limitations," he said. A board of 26 trustees has been chosen to lead the project, including 15 members appointed by Gov. Jim Hunt and one member of the UNC Board of Governors. When the school opens in 1980, 300 students will be admitted, with an additional 300 enrolling the following year. By 1982 a full enrollment of 900 students will attend the school. "To our knowledge there is no other school in the country like this that is residential, as we will be," Lindsey said. Asked if the school's graduates would have an influence on the number of students matriculating at Research Triangle universities, Lindsey said, "You have to realize that the number so students we graduate will not be that ' large. "Hopefully, the students will go. on to higher education in this area and 1 hope We deal exclusively in Science Fiction, Fantasy and other Speculative Fiction. We buy and sell used Science Fiction and Fantasy books. FOR A LIMITED TIME $1.00 off on all POSTERS and CALENDARS Mon. Tues., and Fri. 12:00-9:00 Wed., Thurs., and Sat. 12:00-6:00 presents FOR THE PRICE OF ONE! OH x School? UL-UlbO SLAbALiUviDn fit 31, 1979. that those who go out of state would possibly return." Reaction to the school has not been totally favorable, however. Robert Hershey, headmaster of Durham Academy, said the proposed school could have a negative impact on his and other schools. "In essence, the biggest factor will be the teacher market in this area," Hershey said. "Even now, excellent math and science teachers are difficult to locate. With the opening of the N.C. School of Iranian Parliament opens debate on Bakhtiar rule TEHRAN, Iran ( A P) Thousands of protesters chanting "Death to the shah" marched peacefully through the streets Sunday demanding that the monarchy be abolished and an Islamic republic be set up to replace Iran's new civilian government. As they marched, the Iranian Parliament opened debate on whether to endorse the government of Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar a step that would pave the way for Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to leave his strife-torn nation. Twenty-two of the 268 legislators of the Majlis, the lower house of Parliament, spoke Sunday, half in favor of Bakhtiar's government and half against. The Majlis, which traditionally does not meet on Mondays, scheduled a vote of confidence for Tuesday. The Senate will debate the issue Monday. Majlis delegate Hassan Harzandi, who spoke against the government, said Iran's pains are not political but economic and asked whether the new regime would "stop pouring Iranian money into the pockets of the Americans under the pretext of buying arms." Sheikh ul-Islami, who favored Bakhtiar, said the government's "best bet for victory will be precise and forcefull implementation of the constitution, a constitution in which no one can find one word against Islam." He said opposition Cf.i.- r.i.,r 4&mm3 .i ii.ii.n-a n.l XJ XwJ mi.. snr. I For a New Peugeot at Old Prices. Very soon prices on French bikes will rise, thanks mostly to the slipping value of the dollar. The Peugeot 10-speed you can buy today will cost 15 more by March. So come by and pick up an outstanding new bike at pre-inflation prices. This will be your last chance. the CLEAN MACHINE 1 1 0 W. Main St. Carrboro 967-5 1 04 STUDENT AID FUND DISTRIBUTION will be available at the 3rd floor of Pettigrew Hall 8:00 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.' on the following schedule: Law, Medical and Dental Students' checks will be available on both Monday, January 8th and Tuesday, January 9th. All other students' checks will be available on this schedule: Last names beginning A through F Wednesday, January 10th Last Names beginning G through L Thursday, January 11th Last names beginning M through R Friday, January 12th Office is closed Saturday and Sunday,, January 13th and 14th Last names beginning S through Z Monday, January 15th (Those students who do not meet this schedule must get their checks on Tuesday; January 16th. ) Undergraduate students who are eligible tor Basic Educational Opportunity Grant Funds (BEOG) can receive no checks until all copies of their Basic Grant Student Eligibility Report (SER) has been received and processed by the Student Aid Office. Students whose eligibility for student financial aid was established late but who actually received their funds during Fall Semester may expect to receive their Spring Semester checks on the regular dates of disbursement. All funds will be distributed by check on Please pick up these checks without fail your Official Registration Form (Class checks cannot be delivered to you. Science and Mathmatics the market will become even tighter. "I think the idea of running a boarding school for 900 students is a massive undertaking. 1 spent eight years at a school with only 375 students and that was problem enough." Hershey said a number of questions still will have to be answered concerning the school. One is whether the boarding school will allow day students to enroll, he said. still will come from traitors and Iranians "who , have suffered and who have grievances because they have been cheated and. ..lied to and. ..given false promises." Political observers said the new government would not receive rubber stamp approval but that both houses probably will give Bakhtiar the vote of confidence that would allow him to begin carrying out a program aimed at pulling Iran from the brink of economic and political collapse. The newspaper Ayandegan reported Sunday that it had received a "communique" from a leftist group called "Sazman Mouhadeen," meaning "Organization of Unity," claiming responsibility for the machine gun murder of American oil executive Paul Grimm last Dec. 23. Grimm, an official of the Western-run Oil Service Co., was ambushed in the southwest Iranian city of Ahwaz. The newspaper said the group claimed it killed Grimm to show it sympathized with Iran's stiking oil workers. The army generally refrained from trying to break up the Tehran demonstrations, which were led by protesters loyal to the Ayatullah Khomaini, the exiled religious leader of Iran's dominant Shiite Moslem sect. these days, including all scholarships. on the indicated days. Be sure to bring Schedule) with you. Otherwise, your i 4 ? i !? mm Anti-guerrilla unity SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) Bishop Abel Muzorewa, one of three moderate blacks in the ruling transition government's executive council, Sunday urged black and white Rhodesians to join together tofacethestepped up onslaught by black nationalist guerrillas. He said the war, initially aimed at toppling the white regime of Prime Minister lan Smith, had turned into a "cruel game of confused, unbelievable torture and murder." Carter policy draws ATLANTA (AP) Civil rights activists protesting President Carter's austerity program marched Sunday to Ebenezer Baptist Church only to find that a group of Iranian protesters had gotten there first. Carter was at the church to receive the Martin Luther King Jr. Non-Violent Peace Prize during observances of the slain civil rights leader's 50th birthday The civil rights marchers discovered about 200 Iranian student demonstrators camped across the street from the church, where they hanged and later burned an effigy of Carter in protest of his support for Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Abzug calls firing 'naivete' about women NEW YORK (AP) Bella Abzug, former co-chairperson of the President's National Advisory Council on Women, said Sunday that President Jimmy Carter showed a great deal of "naivete" in firing her last week for criticizing his econoinx policy. Abzug, speaking on ABC-TV's Issues and Answers program, said the president was naive to expect the remaining women on. the committee to continue working if she was replaced by a "yes person." Iraq, Syria merging against Israel TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) Iraq and Syria have reportedly agreed to merge under a single leader and combine their armies on Israel's northeastern border, Israel radio said Sunday. The state radio quoted foreign reports attributed to Arab diplomatic sources in Damascus. According to the report, the two countries agreed in principle to merge into one state with a single military command. The Syrian and Iraqi heads of state will meet next week to discuss details, the report said. Rep. Flood bribery trial begins today WASH INGTON(AP) U.S. Rep. Daniel J. Flood, who gave up acting for a career in Congress, will be spotlighted on a new stage Monday when he goes on trial in a federal courtroom charged with trading his enormous political power for thousands of dollars in bribes. The 75-year-old Pennsylvania Democrat, flamboyant in silk suits and fur lined capes and sporting a villainous-looking, waxed mustache, also is accused of perjury and conspiracy in indictments handed down last year by grand juries in Los Angeles and Washington. "I deny all these allegations, totally and unequivocally," Flood said when he pleaded innocent. He claimed then the "absurd charges" were "brought by desperate men." r Announcements OVER 1500 recent LPs for sale. Rock, Jazz, Classical, etc. I1.00-J2.50 Mon. Jan. 15th through Sat. Jan. 20th. Foundation Bookstore, 135 E. Rosemary St. across from Blimpies, 12 6 pm. SKI SUGARBUSH, VT. with the UNC Ski Club. Spring Break March 3-10,. 5 nights in slopeside condomifiiums, 5 days lift tickets, transportation, taxes and tips only 169.00. Bill Verch, 942-6079. Talk to someone who went to Killington! For Rent LOOKING FOR a room? Pi Lambda Phi is now boarding rooms for the spring semester. Call Jay Bryson at 942-5290. A GREAT APT. for you wild and crazy guys if interested contact the Pinegate Apts. office or call 489-8155 it's 2 bedrooms and baths. Go Heels. TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT, wall-to-wall, all electric, pets & children allowed. $ 190 month. Location: Carrboro. Call 942 5152. Call 929-7262 after 5 pm. Lost & Found I LOST MY best graduation present. If you find a gold serpentine chain bracelet with 6978 on it, please call 933-3612; return it for reward. SKIWOZZLED! Ski things lost in South Square, Big Star parking lot Sat. Jan. 6th. Am in desperate need. Reward offered. Call anytime 929 1254. FOUND: Thursday morn, scarf; near Brookside Apts, Hillsborough St. Call Pete 929 2720. LOST: GOLD RING with red stone. More sentimental value than monetary value. Lost in or around Education building. Call 942-4805 or 929 7133, leave message. Reward offered. Wanted WANTED TO BUY: Any women's North Campus room contract. Anyone wishing to sell, please call Mary Louise at 933-4661. Miscellaneous CREATIVE, CUSTOM PORTRAITS on location of your choice. They make great personalized gifts. Also, seeking photogenic people for advertising promotion. Good pay. 489-1045 (Durham). PHOTOGRAPHERS! Now there's a camera repair shop in Chapel Hill at 405 W. Franklin St. This month, The Focal Plane will clean and lubricate your camera and check shutter speeds for $10. Come and check us out. Open 11 AM to 6 PM, Monday -Saturday. 967-6095. Roommates ROOMMATE WANTED for basement apartment two miles from campus, bus line, own bedroom kitchen, living room, bathroom. Half rent, utilities. Available immediately. Paul, 942 3591. NEED MALE roommate to share 3 bedroom country home. 125 plus utilities. Call 1 542-4745. NON SMOKING FEMALE roommate wanted to share two-bedroom Colony apartment. 1 17.50 monthly and H utilities. Call Joyce 942 5365 2:00 pm 6:00 pm weekdays and anytime weekends. FEMALE ROOMMATE needed tor 3 bedroom Bolinwood Apt. (immediately). Call Teresa or Laurie at 929-5942. NEEDED: FEMALE ROOMMATE to share Old Well apartment with two students. Would be responsible for one-third of rent and utilities. Call 929-5475, keep trying! MALE ROOMMATE to share 2 bedroom apartment. 90 per month plus ' electric and phone. Furnished except your bedroom. On bus route. Call 929-4462, George. Help Wanted BROWN LUNG ASSOCIATION has openings for VISTA Volunteers. Exciting, meaningful work, but low pay and lots of travel. Call Len Stanley 967-2556. 110 N. Estes Dr. urged in Rhodesia double protests For Safe PRICE NEGOTIABLE! Granville female room contract for sale. Please call 929-5759 far information. AVERY SINGLE ROOM contract for sale. Same price as double room. Third floor, and I have an S-5 parking sticker. Call Keith at 933 2925. HOUSING CONTRACT FOR SALE at sacrifice price! Large room with nice view in Avery. Both occupants are selling contracts. Call 933-2916 or 942 1708. GREAT OPPORTUNITY. Connor room contract for sale spring semester 79. Call Pat or Kristy at 929-3016 and leave a message. Keep trying must sell. '66 OLDS Cutlass for sale. Rough interior condition. Runs. Good car for commuting student. 150.00. Please call Phil at 933-5227. FULL ROOM CONTRACT for sale in Ehringhaus Female call 933-3118. GRANVILLE SOUTH female contract for sale immediately at DISCOUNT PRICE Call Dtanne at 933-1456. 1 will bargain I'm desperate! NORTH CAMPUS contract for sale, Winston Dorm. Must sell as soon as possible. Call Dawn 933- 6255. 2 GRANVILLE TOWERS contract's (Girls' Dorm), for sale. Very reduced price. Will negotiate. Call anytime, 933-8046. ONE FEMALE Granville East contract for sale. Must sell immediately. Call 933-1801, anytime. Personals CHRISTOPHER FOURES Many happy returns of the day to my very "bestest" friend! Remember the love of a rose is unsurpassed. Have a wonderful life! Love you whole bunches! Classified info Pick up ad forms in any classified box at all DTH pickup spots or at DTH Office. Return ad and check or money order to DTH Office 12:00 (noon) 1 day before the ad will run ot in campus mail 2 days before. Ads must be prepaid. Rates: 25 words or less Students $1.75 Non-students $2.75 5C for each additional word $1.00 more for boxed ad or bold type Please notify the DTH Office if there are mistakes in your ad, immediately! We wiB only be responsible for the nrst ad run. . lAmn Th Daily Tar He m pubHn by me DaMy Tar HmI Board of Directors ot tha UntvarsHy of North Carolrva daily Monday through Friday during tha regular acadamic yar axcapt during exam period, vacations and summer sessions. Tha Summer Tar Heel Is published weakly on Thursdays during Ota summer sessions. - Offices are at the Frank Porter Graham Student Union Building, University of North Carolina, Chapel H, N.C. 27S14. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-0245, 833-024C, 833-C252, 933-0372: Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1193, 933 0252. Subscription rates: $1.00 per week 3rd class: $2.00 par week 1st class. Tha Campus Governing CouncS shaft have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate al revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.114 of the Student Constitution). The Daily Tar Hael Is a student or sanitation. The Daily Tar Has reserves the right to regutaW the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise or turn aw cy eopy W considers objection efeia. The Daily Tar rree all not consider adjustments or payment for any typographical errors or' erroneous Insertion unless notice Is given to the Business Manager within one (1) day after the advertisement appears, within one (1) day of 'receiving the tear sheets or subscription of the . pt per. The Dally Tar Hael wW not be responsible tor more than one Incorrect Insertion of an advertisement scheduled to run several times. No Bee for such correction must be given before the' next Insertion. Grant Duers - Bualnea Uanagmr Neat Ken bail Advftiaing Manager

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