University of Virginia Library

News-In-Brief

New Bus Route To Run

A University Transit Service
bus will begin running a route
from the intersection of 14th
Street and University Avenue
to the Education School on
Emmet Street tomorrow. The
bus will leave the 14th Street
corner at 7:10 a.m. Monday
through Friday and will arrive
at the Education School by
7:20 a.m. The service is being
established on a trial basis to
determine the demand for a
bus to the Education School
by students from the 14th
Street area who need to be in
class by 7:30 a.m. The run will
be discontinued if the demand
is low.

Cap And Gown

Faculty cap and gown
orders for summer session
commencement are now being
accepted in the Director's
Office, Fourth Floor Newcomb
Hall. Orders for the
Econo-Gown must be
submitted by Friday and
orders for cap and gown rentals
must be submitted by Friday,
July 27.

Fans Needed

In cooperation with
Charlottesville City Sheriff
Raymond Pace, the
Charlottesville-Albemarle
Offender Aid and Restoration
(OAR) program and the
University's Post-Conviction
Assistance project are searching
for four or five floor or hall
fans for inmates at the city jail
this summer.

Persons who have fans to
donate fans should contact
Godfrey Herndon at 924-3034
or Elaine Deller at OAR,
296-2441.

Ford Award

Six Commerce students
have received a Special Award
of Merit as a result of their
work in a student research
project for Ford Motor
Company.

Recent graduates Keith
Jarvis and Kenneth Roberson,
as well as fourth-year students
Stephan Maginn, J. Michael
Malley, Kenneth Patterson and
Deborah Rafal were recipients
of the award.

The six took part in a
nationwide project sponsored by
the Ford organization that
involved designing, carrying
out and writing up studies of
aspects of the marketing of
sub-compact cars.

The projects ranged from
interviewing 50 owners of
Pinto automobiles about their
opinions of the car to research
into personnel management in
dealerships.

Movie

"War Game," the
controversial BBC
documentary about a nuclear
war attack on Great Britain,
will be shown tonight at 8 p.m.
in the South Meeting Room of
Newcomb Hall. Admission is
free.

This is the second film in a
series on war sponsored by the
Charlottesville Resistance and
the Uncle Moses Brigade.

Korkames Talks

Tom Korkames, a member
of the York 5, psychologist,
and Catholic deacon, will speak
on "Resistance and
Contemplation" tomorrow at
7:30 p.m. at the United
Ministry building, 1908 Lewis
Mountain Road.

Mr. Korkames and four
companions were arrested last
year in York, Pa. while
attempting to stop a munitions
train carrying bombs destined
for Vietnam.

Sponsored by the
Charlottesville-Albemarle Peace
Center, the talk is open to the
public.

NRAO Colloquia

The National Radio
Astronomy Observatory and
the Department of Astronomy
will sponsor two joint
colloquia in August.

The first will feature Harvey
Liszt, of Princeton University
and Bell Telephone
Laboratories, who will speak
on "CO Survey of HII
Regions" at 4 p.m. August 9.

The second colloquium will
feature Richard H.T. Bates, of
the Department of Electrical
Engineering, University of
Canterbury, Christchurch, New
Zealand, who will speak on
"Speckle Holography" at 4
p.m. August 29.

Both colloquia will meet in
the NRAO Auditorium on
Edgemont Road. All members
of the University community
are invited.

City Parking

Reversing a previously
sporadic enforcement pattern,
the City of Charlottesville is
now stringently enforcing all
parking regulations within its
boundaries. Tickets are being
issued and cars are being towed
for illegal parking, and a
summons and warrant will be
forthcoming if fines are not
paid. Students are advised to
heed posted parking
regulations.