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Western Carolinian Volume 45 Number 26
Item
Item’s are ‘child’ level descriptions to ‘parent’ objects, (e.g. one page of a whole book).
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WESTERN CAROLINA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFERS EXCLUSIVE TOURS TO ENGLAND AND MEXICO From Atlanta, Georgia TOUR I England — June 16 - 25th, 1980 - $1,238.00 per person, double occupancy TOUR II Mexico — August 4 - 11th, 1980 — $779.00 per person, double occupancy (All Rates Subject to Change) ENGLAND Your Tour of London and Southern England will include Delta Airlines wide-body round trip non-stop jet service from Atlanta complete with tour escorts. Price includes eight nights in London and Southern England using Deluxe Hotels with private bathrooms, continental breakfasts daily, touring by Deluxe Private Motorcoach with services of a trained uniformed guide, all transfers and baggage handling. Your tour will also include touring London's famous West End, Piccadilly, Houses of Parliament, Westminister Abbey and the Changing of the Guards. You will spend three nights at Stratford-on-Avon, Bath and Salisbury. During this portion of the tour you will see some of. England's most pleasant countryside including Shakespeare's birthplace, Anne Hathaway's Cottage, Cotswolds, Roman Baths and the 18th Century Pump Room. A highlight will be a visit to Stonehenge, the pre-historic monument, and the Cathedral at Salisbury which offers the tallest spire in all of England. Included are four complete dinners and one and one-half days of leisure for shopping and personal sightseeing. MEXICO Your tour to Mexico includes Eastern Airlines Direct Jet Service to Mexico City and returning to Atlanta from Merida. You will spend seven nights in Mexico complete with continental breakfasts. This tour Will include a half day tour of Mexico City, Palenque, the home of Cross Temple, the Temple of the Sun and the Temple of the Inscriptions. While touring in the comforts of a modern private air-conditioned motorcoach complete with English speaking guide, we will also visit Kabah, sometimes called the Fortress of Uxmal. Kabah is the home of the Temple of the Masks, the Palace, the Witch's House and the Temple of the Columns. Our next stop will be Uxmal, an impressive Quadrangle consisting of four magnificent structures, representative of the Rulers, Priesthood, Military and the Workers of the Old Mayan World. You will continue on to Merida, the center of the Yucatan. We will spend two nights here with time for leisure and personal sightseeing. One of the highlights of your visit will be Chichen- Itza which represents the peak of Mayan/Toltec Civilization in the Yucatan. This remarkable spot encompasses hundreds of buildings. It is approximately a three square mile site, but only about thirty ruins have been uncovered. Chichen-ltza was founded by the Mayans between 435 and 455 A. D. and is the home of El Castillo or The Great Temple of Kukul-Kan. This escorted tour also includes tips, baggage handling, all entrance fees to areas mentioned in the itinerary, transfers, and first class hotels with private bathrooms. MAIL TO: GLOBE TREKS, INC. 410 Fifth Avenue West Hendersonville, North Carolina 28739 (704) 692-4294 (Clip & Mail) Enclosed is check for $_ RESERVATION FORM ($250 per person) as deposit for . reservations For More Information, Please Check. D London & Southern England D Mexico and the Yucatan June 16 - 25, 1980 August 4 - 11, 1980 MAA4C ADDRFSS 7IP PHONE ( ) ( ) Home Business Please reserve seal(s) on aircraft in D No Smoking Section D Smoking Section Make checks payable to GLOBE TREKS, INC. Payment in full is due 60 days prior to departure. Limited number of single accommodations are available at additional Mexico - $80.00, England - $140.00 per person. Not included in trip price: airport embarkation taxes, meals not mentioned in itinerary, laundry, alcoholic beverages, expenses for passports and visas; personal baggage and trip cancellation insurance, and items of a personal nature. Deposits are refundable minus $25.00 cancellation charge plus a cancellation charge levied by hotels. Trip cancellation insurance is available upon request, and is highly recommended. Globe Treks, Inc. will confirm receipt of your deposit by mail, and will mail detailed information concerning trip prior to departure. These tours are offered on a First Come, First Serve Basis and space is limited. Please write or call for more information. Sciences recieve grant 1 1 Two faculty research projects at WCU have been awarded $33,056 by the National Science Foundation, according to an announcement from the office of Congressman Lamar Gudger. Of that amount, $24,956 was awarded to purchase equipment for a project entitled Chemical, Geological, and Biological Studies Involving Metal Analysis by Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometry" which is being investigated by Dr. J. Rofer Bacon, associate professor of chemistry; Dr. Steven P. Yurkovich, associate professor of geology; and Dr. Frederick W. Harrison, professor and head of the WCU department of biology. Methods developed from that project will be used for trace metal analysis of natural aquatic samples from th^ surrounding area. The second project funded by the NSF was Dr. Frank T. Prochaska's "Infared and Visible-Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Studies of Molecular Ions and Chemical Intermediates Isolated in Inert Gas Matrices at 12K." Dr. Prochaska is an assistant professor of chemistry at WCU. The matrix isolation technique Procheska is utilizing is the only method by which infrared and visible-ultraviolet absorption data can be obtained for molecular ions. That project will receive $8,100 for equipment. Seminar program i I Read this ... A series of seminars has been scheduled in eleven regions of North Carolina by the North Carolina Coalition for Renewable Energy Resources. The seminars will bring together individuals and organizations who are participating in the Department of Energy's "1980 Appropriate Technology Small Grants Program." The program was designed by the Department of Energy in response to increased interest by citizens in developing small scale energy related technologies that are"appropriate" to local needs and skills. About two million in grant monies is available in the southeast, and inventors, innovators, small businesses and local non-profit groups can apply through this program for grants of up to $50,000. A toll-free number has been made available to answer questions about the program: 1-800-662-7131. According to Jon Parker, technical assistance coordinator, the three-hour seminars are designed to meet three goals: 1. to bring together individuals in specific geographical areas with similar interests, 2. to offer assistance in filling out grant proposal applications, and to answer specific questions about the program, and 3. to suggest additional sources of funding for projects. The seminars are open to the public at no cost. Individuals who are interested in finding out more about the program are urged to call the Energy Division Hotline toll-free. l_l m From page 2. . asked me what was wrong with my food, the manager finally arrived. I explained my predicament. Boogie Beetle remained motionless during the course of my conversation with the manager which must have lasted thirty seconds. The manager simply offered to give me another plate of "Boogie Beetles." The words "I'm sorry" never spurted forth from his lips. He insisted that my now mute "friend" had evolved from the "soul food" greens instead of the pork. Who the hell cares whether he came out of my pork? The fact remains that there was a six-legged creature in my damn food and I did not appreciate him performing his multi-talented routine on my plate. It's not enough that only a week ago today I was accused of eating supper twice at Dodson. I swore on the Pillsbury Dough Boy that I did not eat twice, but I was charged with having eaten the meal anyway, and "justice for all." Well, it's getting late and we all have better things to do. Look, I just finished the show "Ghosts" and I had the "Clap"-V.D., in case you didn't understand that four-letter word, for six weeks. I have used up the entire penicillin supply at the infirmary. It's not enough that my sexual activity had had to almost come to a complete standstill, but now I can't even enjoy the "simple things in life" without worrying about intestinal worms. I guess I'll just go back to eating the ole Nacho Cheese Doritos for supper. Sincerely, John Phillip Strickland
Object
Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).
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The Western Carolinian is Western Carolina University's student-run newspaper. The paper was published as the Cullowhee Yodel from 1924 to 1931 before changing its name to The Western Carolinian in 1933.
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![wcu_publications-10236.jpg](/media/w320/wcu_publications/wcu_publications-10236.jpg)