Campus JJai.kni)ah Compiled by Janri Ofeoii . I'lihlk A?rvicc innoiincrmrnK musl be lurnrd into th tun out side I) IH ofrKTN in the Carolina llnkm by I p.m. if lh art lo -ran Ihr nrxl day. Only announcement!! fnm lnivtrsiiy rwKnird and campus organizations will h printed. All an nouncement must be limited lo 25 word and ran only run for' two days. TODAY'S EVENTS The BSU Council win meet at 7:30 p.m. at the BSU, with the worship committee meeting at 8:30 p.m. Come lo one of the last two Wood mobile of the semester . from 10 a.m. -3:30 p.m. in the Great Hall of the Carolina Union. ' ' ' ' 1 ' The Senior Cbm Marshall will have their last meeting of the semester at 4:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. Check the Union desk for the room number. , The CaroM na-i n-Sictty study program will be presented with ' a slide show at 7:30 p.m. at the Carolina Union. Ask at the Union desk for the room number. Holy Eucharist will be celebrated at 5:30 p.m. at the Lutheran Campus Ministry at 300 E. Rosemary St., and will be followed by a fellowship meal at 6 p.m. All are welcome. The last film in the South Africa FHnt Festival, Six Days at Soweio, will be presented at 7:30 p.m. in Greenlaw 101. A dis cussion will follow. The film is presented by PIRG, AFAM, AWS and BSM. The Anglican Student Fellowship welcomes everyone to Ho ly Communion at 10 p.m. in the Chapel of the Cross. The Rev. Stephen Elkins-Williams will preach and celebrate. Refresh ments and fellowship will follow. There will be a Campus Governing Council meeting at 6:30 p.m. in 221 Greenlaw. All students are encouraged to attend. Worried about exams? Come to an Essay Exam Workshop offered by the Writing Lab in 101 Greenlaw Hall. Don't forget the UNC-CH Riding Club Christmas party at 8 p.m. Rides from campus are available. Hilda Vanlankveld will speak on Women in Development in Tanzania at noon in the International Center. There will be a Pre-medPre-deat Interviewing Skills Work shop at 5 p.m. Sign up outside 201 Steele Building. Readers' Theatre presents Aever Saw Another Butterfly, an adaptation of poems and drawings by the children of Terezin Concentration Camp, at 8 p.m. today and Thursday in 203 Bingham Kali. A Carolina tradition continues at 8 p.m. when the Carolina Union presents a dramatic reading of A Christmas Carol in the Carolina Union Auditorium. Dr. D.S. Heeschra, National Radio Astronomy Obser vatory, will speak on "Variability of the Radio Emission of Radio Galaxies and Quasars" at 4 p.m. in 265 Phillips Hall. The Wesley Foundation will hold a fellowship dinner at 6 p.m. followed by an informal songfest. The Global Issues Committee of the Campus Y will host a discussion on the conflict in Northern Ireland at 7:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. There will be a UNC Cycling dub meeting at 7 p.m. in the upstairs lounge of the Carolina Union. A videotape of the Athens Georgia Twilight Criterium will be shown. . Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority and APO are sponsoring a Blood Mobile in the Great Hall of the Carolina Onion from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. There will be a Big Little Buddy Christmas Party at 4 p.m. at the Chi Omega Sorority House on the corner of Franklin and Hillsborough streets. There will be an AIESEC officers meeting at 5 p.m. at Molly Maguire's. It will be brief. You must be there or else. To all Stalwart ECOS folks: Thanks for the turnout this semester. Can you make it one more time? Come to a short meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. Attention all Alpha Xeta Sigma Brothers: There will be a called meeting. at 7 p.m. in 221 Venablc Hall. The Carolina Union Forum Committee will hold a brief but important meeting at 6 p.m. in the Carolina Union. LHJPJCIHIEOrJ SPECIIAL Soup Bar and Salad Bar ... $2.95 Sandwich with choice of Soup or Salad Bar . .$2.95 HAPPY HOUR 9 'til 1 - Seven Days From 11.3Q-2 Mon.-Fri. 157 E. Rosemary :17ED H BSD r:.'; . 6-9 p.m. Buy a Regular Sandwich and get 25c Draft 151 E. Rosemary St. EABLWYNNS artrmatic reacting of Dickens' LflJ WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER I 33 , UNION AUDITORIUM 1 . ' vW jffit) 7 JOIN US FOR REFRESHMENTS AND CAROLLING AFTERWARDS LAST For JonBrisley Allyson Edwards Lightly Breaded, Quick Fried Seafood Piled High on a Hot Platter. O LAjnplLiiJiiciBiEir I y Calabash Style -. COMING EVENTS Come lo the Moodmobile from 1 1 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Thurs day at Granville South. Judy Eastman, a counselor in private practice in Chapel Hill, will speak on "Personal Relationships" at 5:45 p.m. Thursday at the Baptist Student Union, 203 Battle Lane. The New Music Ensemble will give a free, public concert at 8:15 p.m. Thursday in Hill Rehearsal Hall, room 107. Donald Oehler, associate professor of musk at UNC, will conduct. The North Carolina Botanical Garden will hold two pro grams Thursday. Registration and a fee are required for both. Call 967-2246 for information. Al AIESEC members interested in going to Detroit: there will be a meeting at 4 p.m. Thursday at the AIESEC office. If you can't come but are still interested, call Sandy al 933-3550 or leave a note in the office. Chimera, the fantasy and-science fiction dub, presents a talk on Charles Fori by Paul Thompson at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in ' the Carolina Union. Check schedule at the Union desk for the room number. Everyone is invited. . The Italian Club invites you to celebrate Christmas Italian style. "Come all ye faithful" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday to the Carolina Union with a small gift to exchange. Check the Union desk for the room number. The American Society of Personnel Administrators (ASPA) will hold a meeting at 5:30 p.m. Thursday in T-7 New Carroll. John Warren, president of Sunbelt Hydroelectric, will speak. The Campus Y Committee' on Undergraduate Education will meet at 3:30 p.m. Thursday at the Y. - Mid-Campus Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will have its annual Christmas Worship service at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Carolina Union. There will be singing, sharing and a love feast. Check the Union desk for the room number. Everyone is wel come. The Women's Soccer Club Christmas party will be held at 6 p.m. Thursday at Mr. Gatti's. - The A.B.S. Christmas Mixer will be held at 3:30 p.m. Thurs day in the Carolina Union. Refreshments will be served. Check the Union desk for the room number. The Hunger Action Committee will meet at 3 p.m. for Sur prise Friday at Anne's house. See directions at the Campus Y or call Anne at 929-1433. Beyond Compliance, this week's Friday Flick will be pre sented at noon Friday in the Conference Room of the second floor of the Health Sciences Library. The film is sponsored by the Audiovisual Services. The Campus Y will hold its annual handicrafts bazaar Fri day through Sunday in the Great Hall of the Carolina Union. . For more information, call the Campus Y at 962-2333. The film Women in Arms, a documentary on the role of women hi Nicarauga's development, will be shown Friday at 12:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union and at 7 p.m. in the Presby terian Student Center on Henderson Street. Everyone is invited and both showings are free. "The World at Wan the Origin, Nature and Consequences of World War II," a seminar featuring Kenan Professor Gerhard Weinberg, will be presented Friday and Saturday. To enroll or for more information, call 962-1 123. Final Exams Survival Kit will be held at 3 p.m. Thursday. Call Student Health Services at 966-2281, ext. 275 or Student . Development and Counseling Center at 962-2175. ITEMS OF INTEREST 'All organization presidents and chairpersons: the Campus Leadership Workshop questionnaire deadline has been extend ed to Reading Day. Please return the questionnaires as soon as possible. More questionnaires are available in the North Carolina Fellows Lounge of the Carolina Union. Pre-vets: Applications for Fall 1983 NCSU School or Veterinary Medicine are available in 201 D Steele Building and , 101 Nash Hall. They are due in Raleigh by 5 p.m. Jan. 14. Students can sign up for their English W, 1, or 2 papers from Fall 1981 in 204 Greenlaw Hall. These are the folders that have been on file in the department for a year. Papers will be des troyed after exams. All Major Cards Accepted 967-5727 BY" SPEC I fi I 1 967-4696 Ma UNC SKIERS Ski Killington, Vt. Jan. 2-7, 1983 Killington is the East's most extensive resort. Home of 6 mountains, 85 trails, t 15 lifts, and a 10 mile run, IT IS THE SKIERS RESORT. 5 Days Skiing & Lodging Prices from $169 to $189 WEEK OF SIGN-UPS information contact: 933-8446 Ned Back 967-0577 933-5006 Allison Callicott 968-1110 STYLE SEAFOOD Landlubbers 2 Mi. NC 64 East to Raleigh Univ. " Mote) Banquet Facilitia Mixed Beverages Available Beer and Wine Chinese restaumnttorep By SHARON SHERIDAN Staff Writer : While UNC students were packing their suitcases in preparation for a Thanksgiving vacation at home, one local business was packing up for good. Students can no longer order submarine sandwiches from Blimpies. The business has closed, soon to be replaced by a Chinese restaurant. 1 . ' "It's a good sale for me, and business is not what it used to be," Blimpies owner Neil Horwitz said last week, (hey were not going bankrupt or losing money, the Cross country By KATHY NORCROSS and KURT ROSENBERG Staff Writer On a brisk, cool day in East Ruther ford, N. J., imagine the horse racing track at the Meadowlands: deep dirt, thick grass, man-made hills and bales of hay. Imagine also a number of the nation's top female runners gathered to compete runners such as TAC defending champion Julie Brown, American marathon record holder Joan Benoit and former Olympian Jan Merrill. This is The Athletics Con gress Cross Country Championships; the nationals for women both runners in and out of college. Three women from North Carolina's cross country team ventured to" the Garden State to compete in Sunday's 3.1 mile race. Freshman Madlyn Morreale finished somewhere between runners 60 and 62 with a time of 17:34. Holly Mur ray, another freshman, ran in the Junior Nationals, ages 14-18, and finished sixth with a time of 17:55. And although her finish in the National Championships last week in Indiana was not all that she had hoped for, junior Joan Nesbit redeemed herself in the TAC meet. : A N NJO JJNCING call for entries for UNDERGRADUATE JURIED STUDENT ART SHOW Monday, February 28 8:00 a.m. - 12:00 noon Carolina union gallery committee STUDENT HEALTH SEEVICE HOURS - The Student Health Service will be closed from 5 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 23, 1982 to 8 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 28, 1982. Emergencies can be seen at North Carolina Memorial Hospital Emergency Room. If you have an emergency that normally can be handled at SHS during this time, the :SHS.wttl.assum Pharmacy will be closed from 5 p.m. Thursday Dec: 23, 1982 to 9 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 4, 1983; Permanent Centers open days, evenings and weekends. low hourly cost Dedicated full-time staff. Complete TESTN-TAPE" facilities for review of class lessons and supple mentary materials. Classes taught by stilled instructors. 01 si:M' 1! .it '"fca Jin EDUCATIONAL CMTEK . TEST PRERUUTION SPECIALISTS SMCE 1938 I Carolina Classic 2:45 CITIZEN 5os Orson Welles in KANE, f jf' ONE OF THE BEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED IS ABOUT TO HAPPEN AGAIN. 20th CENTURY-FOX FILMS 2:30, 4:45, GOLD OR SILVER IMPORTED A BOTTLED ML. ) . it- k :l LSI1 yot. it, : t Jk , i business was not making as much as it used to, Horwitz said. "It's just the right time to get out." The new restaurant will open Dec. 17 or 27, depending on how long it takes to remodel the building, said one of the owners, Herbert Chu. Offering Mandarin and Szechuan Chinese cuisines, the restaurant will be cafeteria-style, Chu said. Customers may eat in or take out the food. Chu said he hopes to cater particularly to the students. He said the restaurant would be open from about 1 1 a.m. teams make In this race, which included more run ners than the NCAAs, Nesbit finished No. 32. Her time of 16:51 was not only her personal best, but a new school record also. And Nesbit finally beat her rival, N.C. State's Connie Jo Robinson, who finished No. 33. Nesbit almost decided not to run in the : TAC meet. After her collapse at the NCAA finish line, she pondered . over whether or not to compete. Yet Coach Don Lockerbie managed to convince her that she had one more race left in her. "He knows me better than I know my self," Nesbit said. The unusual course, which included jumping hay bales, did not bother Nesbit. In fact, this probably strenghtened her performance. "I used to be a hurdler in the ninth and 10th grades, I was very, very relaxed," she said. "It was the first time I felt like I was in control," Nesbit said. "It was a perfect ending." Jeff Hyman could Have easily have been intimidated. Running against people like Eamonn Coghlan, the world record holder in the indoor mile, Henry Rono of Kenya and NCAA cross country cham- i Opportunity to make up missed lessons. Voluminous home-study materials constantly updated by researchers expert in their field. i Opportunity to transfer to and continue study at any of our over 105 centers. Ml m - : i a ! S.'.f 3'f . 'tt'mfr Call Days, Eves & Weekends 919-489720 4B9-2348 2634 Chapel Hill Blvd. Suite 112 Durham. NC 27707 fm Mvmatitm At wit own CMwi OutsM H.Y. Stan uuminn $00 2231712 . 7:00 9:1 5 v FUMUM STRUT t2-jeai . . .( r 'J 7:15, 9:45 pg LJWL fa c A P frrsi-Rnnn mmmkm7 0 m0 uri nM -rn i f kuJ ji nnnuM mHi A.i i.iii Auari W- Lain. .i7 L 1 r BY TEQUILA JALISCO S.A. ST. LOUIS. MO. 60 PROOF Wednesday, Blimpies strides in New Jersey pion Mark Scrutton was something he wasn't exactly used to. It could have been even worse when the junior race at Sunday's TAC meet was canceled. But Hyman, who would have been running u the junior division, didn't have any qualms, outwardly at least, about competing in the same cate gory with dozens of world class runners. Instead, He joked about being "cast into the treacherous and intense competition of the open class." The freshman from Avon, Conn., used some intensity of his own. Despite a severe stomach cramp that he suffered between the fourth and fifth miles, Hyman ended his first season at North Carolina with one of his best races. He finished 170th in a field of more than 500 runners, in a time of 32:18. After the cramp 'subsided at about five miles, Hyman felt strongjhe estimated Doable Your Pleasure Bat riot Yoar Rent SI 00 Off Yoar First Month's Rent APARTMENTS. 4216 Garrett Road Durham 942-2302 409-2302 "ATHLETICS ARID ACADEMICS" A Panel Discussion John Swofford Benson Wilcox ' Susan'EhrihghausrMdaerltor Wednesday; December 1 at 4 p.m. in Gerrard Hall Sponsored by American Association of University Professors Luncheon Specials available at lunch 11 to 2 p.m. M-F Pizza buffet . . . . $2.95 Spaghetti $1.95 Lasagna . . ..... $2.95 Salad bar ...... $1.95 Great Potato .... $1.95 I I I I I PRESENT TIIIO AD FOU Open Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-midnite, Fri. & Sat. 11-1 a.m.. Sun 4-11 p.m. 203 W. FRANKLIN ST. 942-5149 qpi ti m Our secret is out! . , ni'ar'-'i-niYiiiiiiiiiiniriiii- T' i 'ft V fcyi- ill w. '- 't- Quality- iii in food service in maintenance in housekeeping in programming Or is it-fun? or good friends or plenty? or convenience? or even more? Room and meal accommodations for Spring available now at Granville Towers University Square 929-7143 December 1, 1932The Daily Tar Heel3 until 9 p.m. to serve lunch and dinner, and that there are plans for a happy hour after 9 p.m., where drinks will be served with complimentary finger food. Although there are several other Chinese restaurants in the area, Chu said he is not worried about competition. "The competition (is) only good for the consumer," he said. "I have confidence in myself." Blimpies moved to the 118 E. Franklin Street location Aug. .29, 1980, said John Davis, director of Building In-, spections for Chapel Hill. Blimpies was located in NCNB Plaza for several years before that. that within a half mile he passed between 25 and 30 people. Then, with 500 yards left, he was stricken with another cramp. Hyman can only wonder how much higher he would have finished had it not been for the cramps, since he was at his peak for the race. . "Overall, I've run better," he said, "but I was concentrating better than I ever have in a 10,000 meter race." Which is impressive, considering the competition Hyman was up against. "I wasn't really nervous," he said. "I was more excited to be able to run in a race like that." And Hyman is looking rbrward to re turning to the TAC Championships next year. In 1983, though, he plans to leave the cramps at home. 7 iU i If? t 'i QUI ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 3:30 5:25 7:20 9:15 Michael Palin (of "Monty Python") The Missionary (R) 2:15 4:40 7:05 9:30 Richard Gere An Officer and " a Gentleman (R) 3:20 5:15 7:10 9:05 The Last Unicorn g) Joseph Flora Stirling Haig 3 XWAlj Gpcclala Monday Lasagna & all the salad you can cat! only $2.95 Tuesdays-all the pizza & salad you can eat! only S2.C5 Wednesday all the spasketti & salad you can eat! , only $2.75 I HiHflAaAAyAAyPBBAlAy llpi iy rooms 4 v