1 2 The Daily Tar Heel Monday, February 27, 1978 campus calendar- Employees question fairness of paycheck deduction policy Compiled by Kelly Carr Public service announcements must be turned in to the box outside the DTH oflices in the Union by 1 00 p m II thev are to run the next day Each item will run at least twice l fLftr i n - 1 ACTIVITIES TODAY Students lor McNeill Smith for the U.S. Senate will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 205 Carolina Union. The Orientation Committee ot the Association ot Business Students will meet at 3 p.m. in 201 Carroll. The Association (or Women Students will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 202 Carolina Union. Nominations for 1978-79 officers will be accepted. A speaker on abortion rights will address the group. Voter Registration will be held from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday in the Chapel Hill Public Library, and from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Chapel Hill Municipal Building and Carrboro Town Hall. The Stop Smoking Clinic will be held from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Monday in 106 Berryhill. A Fine Arts Festival meeting will be held at 6:15 p.m. in 302A Steele. Raffle Tickets for the one ACC tournament ticket to be given away by the CAA are available from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Carolina Union The UNC Go Club will meet at 3 p.m. in Room 21 3 Carolina Union. Anyone interested in playing the world's most ancient and intriguing war game is invited. Professor Walter R. Allen of the Department of Sociology will speak on "The lnspact of Governmental Social Policies on Black Families: Beneficial or Detrimental?" at the Policy Analysis Group meeting at noon in 207 Hamilton. All junior and sophomore undergraduates interested in working with the National Science Foundation Undergraduate Research Program In International Relations and who would like more information on the program should meet with Edward E. Azar between 10 a.m. and noon in 259 Hamilton. The NSF program is full-time work beginning in June and ending Aug. 5. Delta Sigma PI will leave at 4:30 p.m. from the Ramshead parking lot. Parliamo Italiano! The Italian Table meets at 6:30 p.m. at the Zoom-Zoom restaurant. The Education Bill Committee of NCSL will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Room 215 Carolina Union. Everyone please be present. The North and South Chapters of Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship will have an ice skating party at 6:30 p.m. in the parking lot of the Chapel of the Cross. Everyone is welcome. Please bring a car if you have one. The I.E. Speech Team will meet at 7 p.m. in 103 Bingham. All those interested are urged to attend. AFS will meet at 8:30 p.m. in Room 205 Carolina Union. All students interested in helping organize a weekend on campus for state high school exchange students should attend. Please come. For information, call 967-9340. UPCOMING EVENTS The Smokers Table will be held from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in 106 Berryhill. The Association ol International Students will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the International Center. The Association of Business Students will hold a brief presentation and discussion for Cookie Sale at ThelPs! 2 dozen cookies for $1.00 All your favorites: Chocolate chip, Oatmeal. Old Fashioned Sugar, and Pecan. Reg. 72r a dozen. Weekdays 8:30-6:00 This week. only RESTAURANT ) Serving Daily -V Mir, n r V " . t ' if. Jean-Michel Cousteau will appear on Tuesday, February 28th at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. The presentation will feature films and slides from Mr. Cousteau's voyages with his father on the Calypso. carolra i ! ! ,- Mir' ' ' l I 1 I f . students interested in a career in retail at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the faculty lounge of Old C arroll. The Walk tor Humanity Committee w ill meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 206 ol the Y building. Anyone interesled in helping with the walk is invited to attend. Betty McCain, North Caiolina Democratic Party chairperson, will speak to the UNC V oung Democrats at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Room 202 Carolina Union. Education seniors and graduate students seeking employment who want to use the services of the Career Planning and Placement Office are invited to an orientation meeting from 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesday in 20 IC Peabody. Please sign up in 21 1 Hanes if you plan to attend. An orientation meeting for the Pre-Career Experience Program, which helps students who want short-term experience in a field of potential, career interest, will be held at 3 p.m. 1 ucsdav in 306 Hanes. Professor D. McQuarrie ol Indiana University will speak "On the Theory of Ionic Solutions" at the physical chemistry seminar Tuesday. A shorl course. Government Documents in the Health Sciences, will je held from 9 to 1 1 a.m. Tuesday in the history room of the library. Albert Long will speak at the Fellowship of Christian Athletes meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Kenan Fieldhouse. A UNCCC Short Course, Advanced SCR 1 1' I will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in 228 Phillips. An IRSS Short Course, SYMAP will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in 306 Saunders. The Chapel Hill Public Library will present Captains Courageous at 7 p.m. I ucsdav and Wednesday in the library meeting room. ITEMS OF INTEREST Juniors and seniors who wish to learn how state government functions may apply for an 1 1 week internship in Raleigh from May 30 to Aug. 1 1. This program is not limited to students w ho are definitely headed for public service careers. The deadline for applications is Feb. 27. For more information, come by Career Planning and Placement. Rising seniors In liberal arts and graduate students in health care administration may be eligible for a summer internship with the Social Security Administration. Interested students should come by Career Planning and Placement, 211 Hanes and read the information available at the front desk. The application deadline is noon on Mar. 3. Students interested in showing their work in the Carolina Union's North Gallery should sign up at the Union Desk through March I. With every subscription to the 1978 Yackety Yack get a free "Carolina Basketball" poster. For a Yack and free poster come by Suite D of the Carolina Union any weekday between I and 5 p.m. or call 933-1259 for more information. 1 he price is $10. The next issue of Black Ink will feature an exclusive review of the spanking new musical. "Timbuktu." the heretofore untold story of "The Attack of the Giant Type." outgoing Daily Tar Heel Editor Greg Porter's rebuttal to an Ink editorial on desegregation and an examination of the goals and obstacles of black publications on white and black campuses. Distribution date is March 2. Thell's Bakery 124 E. Franklin St. 942-1954 Sundays 1:00-6:00 A Favorite Returns once again with dinner get free "seconds" on our delicious hot rolis. Conveniently located downtown, up the little alley across from NCNB 11:30-2:00 4:45-7:15 Tickets arc $1.00 available at the Union Desk and the door. r . if f e" "11 -gym.- The hum of these transformers may soon die down to a mere mutter as UNC coal supplies cfwindle and authorities worry. Present supplies of this increasingly scarce fuel should last a month. Pictured here is a power station on Cameron Avenue. UNC coal supply slipping, may be gone in one month By pam m m Staff. Writer Even though I'NC's coal supply is not yet critically short, administrators are wondering how' they will heat buildings on campus a month from now. Utilities Director Robert I'eake said. . Gov. Jim Hunt last week urged North Carolinians to conserve energy voluntarily by cutting back thermostats to 65 degrees during the day and 60 at night. But UNC has no plans to comply fully with the governor's mandate, said John Link, heating and air conditioning superintendent. UNC's coal stockpile is not as large as Link and Peake had hoped because the 84 day coal strike and winter weather have slowed coal shipments. Link said Friday some thermostats on campus have already been adjusted so buildings are not heated from 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. weekdays or over weekend periods. University administrators have no plans to reduce heating levels as the governor requested because the large number of thermostats would pose time and manpower (Jr Wa c f ftMtew Hi mmM m ciyrnkfa add, a 9(w dkiJfejti. 3,eUCfo9& 1213 fi.Swtfefoi 942-2266 The Navy ROTC's Two-Year Program for Sophomores For d-tails call Lt. M.M. Graves 933-11932344 v I St 1 Yii problems. Link said. Warm weather and spring break next week may cut campus energy consumption 33 percent and help avoid a crisis, the superintendent said. Hunt press aide Stephanie Bass said the governor's energy plan may have prevented energy shortage problems such as North Carolina had last winter. "We are about two weeks away from the mandatory conservation phase of the plan, which would include a four-day workweek for state government workers and a 60-hour workweek for retail businesses," Bass said. The governor ordered mandatory wintertime fuel cutbacks in early February 1977 because of the severity of the winter coal shortages. Mandatory conservation measures for UNC could lead to restrictions on extracurricular activities because of curtailments of nighttime lighting and heating, Bass said. Link said if mandatory conservation is implemented, power plant operators will reduce the temperature in hot water pipes heating campus buildings. & tfft a at dMritht By MICHELE MECKE Assistant Managing Editor Charles league, a supervisor at the UNC physical plant was upset when his last paycheck was short $20. Like 57 other University employees during the last pay period, money was deducted from league's pay as restitution for unpaid parking fines. Charles Daye, an associate professor in the UNC School of law. says he considers such deductions "the taking of property without due process. The University bases its authority to deduct money from paychecks on a general provision adopted by the Board of Trustees. The Board takes its authority from a N.C. General Statute under the Higher Education Act, which provides that "each board of trustees may establish procedures for the collection of these (parking) penalties, and they may be enforced by civil action in the nature of a debt." v. But Daye says, "I don't see that the board has been delegated such authority." Daye said he believes the statute allows the University to bring a civil suit against persons" with unpaid fines, but that it does not provide for payroll deduction. Daye and Barry Nakell. another associate professor in the law school, both had money withheld from their pay for parking violations in 1976. "I found it extremely offensive." Nakell said. "1 think the parking situation here is arbitrary, especially around the law school."" Daye said he has registered numerous complaints regarding University parking policies but had received no satisfactory response from Ted Marvin, director of the UNC Security Services Department, which oversees campus . parking. Daye said he questions "'whether the University, J12 tJ i7S-JTjf fNifj opo n CLlSSrMMI2i . I. ., ,,.,..,...mimn..,.tt.,l.nf,nm.. .... ,, UP TO 50 OFF. Pick your own discount during February. Great cold weather & camping gear. Authentic Army-Navy surplus. Poor Richard's, Eastgate Shopping Center, Around corner next to Eckerds. 929-5850. DORM SIZE REFRIGERATORS for sale. New with 4 yr. compressor warranty. 2 c.u. ft. $125 delivered Tuesday evening between 6 & 9 p.m. Call 1-467-2852 and leave your name, campus address and telephone number. Collect OK. ALBUMS AND PAPERBACKS for sale. 12 price or less at The Fair Exchange. We also buy and trade. Next to Byrd's in Carrboro. FOR -6ALE: BEAUTIFUL SIAMESE female . kitten, 11 weeks old, fully litter trained. Affectionate personality. $30. Call Pete, 929-3270. Keep trying! FOR SALE: HOUSING CONTRACT Winston Dorm (men's room) only $100 available immediately. Call 933-6215. 3 FOUND: CALCULATOR behind Coker Hall on 22nd. Call 933 4231. Identify and it's yours. FOUND MON. NIGHT in front of Bingham Hall steps: a red, navy, and white striped toboggan. Pick up at the Union Desk. LOST: Glasses, badly needed! On L-Bus, Wednesday, 929-9973. r ACCOUNTANT NIGHT AUDITOR POSITION Night auditor to audit records for workshops and conferences at Granville Towers. Compensation includes salary, furnished apartment and meals while cafeteria open. Forty hour's working 12 midnight to 8:00 a.m., Monday through Friday, from mid-May through mid August. For an application, call 929-7143 or come by Granville Towers South, University Square EDE - MF. WORK IN JAPAN! Teach English conversation. No experience, degree, or Japanese required. Send long, stamped, self-addressed envelope for details. Japan-163, 411 W. Center, Centralia, WA 98531. OVERSEAS JOBS Summer year-round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. Free information Write: BHP Co., Box 4490, Dept. NL, Berkeley, CA 94704 WANTED: RELIABLE PERSON to house clean once a week. Must provide own transportation. Call: Jim, 942-7581 after 5:00 p.m. ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS: Looking tor a part-time job with good income, flexible hours, and real experience with a career opportunity in the business world? Call Jim Morgan, Northwestern Mutual Life, 942-4187. NEED RIDE TO NORTHERN INDIANA for spring break. Share usuals. Please call Patrick O'Keefe, 933-2062 days or 967 8169 eves, and weekends. GOING SOUTH FOR SPRING BREAK? If you can get me reasonably near Charleston, S.C. (within 30 miles), I will pay entire gas bill that far. Call 933 6073, ask for Ginger. JUNIORS! Applications are available until March 2nd for $500 travel. Fellowships awarded by Class of 1938. Go abroad this summer with an educational goal. Come by the International Center, Bynum Hall. A CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LECTURE entitled "Riding Easy in the Harness" wili be given by Thomas A. McLain, C.S.B., Tuesday, February 28 at 5 p.m. in Room 202 Carolina Union. Ail are invited to attend. by stale law, is authorized to reduce employees' pay" and "whether parking appeals procedures satisfy fairness" by providing due process. But Marvin said that before initiating the payroll deduction policy, the University checked with attorneys from the Institute of Government and the state attorney general's office. "In the opinion of the University it (payroll deduction) is legal, and we will continue to do it," Marvin said. In an opinion requested by the University in 1974, Joseph Ferrell, an Institute of Government professor, said that in the case of UNC, withholding parking fines from paychecks does not constitute garnishment of wages. Ferrell defined garnishment as a proceeding in which a creditor seeks satisfaction for a debt from property or credits owed the debtor from a third party. In the case of UNC and its employees, Ferrell said, there is no third party involved. "In such a situation, it is my opinion that withholding the penalty from the wages constitutes a set-off and not a garnishment." Teague, Daye and Nakell complained of being unaware of the University's authority to deduct money from their paychecks, saying the never had given consent for such a deduction. "I didn't realize it if I signed such a consent," Nakell said. "If 1 had I wouldn't have done it." Marvin said that written consent is not necessary for deductions of this nature. The University's authority to withhold pay for outstanding arking fines is a matter of public record, he said, and is stated in several publications dealing with parking. Marvin also said that persons who do not pay their fines within 72 hours of the time the citation is issued are notified of the payroll deduction procedure in a follow-up letter. 1 COUNSELING: TRANSFORM YOURSELF. Beyond psychiatry. A new approach to self enlightenment. Shape your destiny creatively. Write: Dr. Merc, 739 Vance St., Roanoke Rapids, N.C. 27870. SAVE THIS AD! If you're pressed for time, let me type your papers for you. $lpage. Editing and composition tutoring also available from honor graduate. 942-6745. FINE FOODS, Excellent entertainment nightly at Compare, -TeoTght: . JEBBlEf J DOBSON,. All y.ou-can-eatlrciaf;;'ghKttj J and meat' sauce, 5-9:30. Compardiel, Jones J J Ferry Road, Carrboro. INSTA COPY Offset printing and quick copying while you wait. 100 satisfaction puaranteed. Check our fast service and low prices on theses work. Insta-Copy, corner of Franklin & Columbia (over the Zoom), 929-2147. TO MY BAROQUE MISTRESS - We spent the night and the morning here. We talked ahd once I even kissed you. Come back. Come here. Come back here. The Journ. LITTLE STEVIE, I love your Rowanese accent and cute-ass smile. Happy Birthday! Mother Woodstock. HAPPY ANNIVERSARY MARC! Some things will always be special no matter how often they're done. They're always a pleasure, they're something to treasure, and loving you is one! Love you always, Tom. 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 or in cam pus mail 2 days before. Ads must be prepaid. Kates: 25 words or less Students -- $1.50 Non-Students 2.50 5c for each additional word $1.00 for boxed ad or bold type "Please notity the D TH Oftice if there are mistakes in your ad, immediately! We will only be responsible for the first ad run. Tha Daily Tai Haal it publishad by tha Daily Tar Haal Board of Director! of tha Univariity of North Carolina daily Monday through Friday during tha regular academic yaar except during axam period, vacations and aummer teuiona. Tha following datea ara to be tha only Saturday iaauai: Sept. 17. Oct. 1. 8. 22. Nov. 6. Tha Summer Tar Haal ia published weakly on Thursdays during tha aummer sessions. Off ices ara at tha Frank Porter Graham Student Union Building, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27B14. Telephone numbers: , News, Sporte-933 0246. 933-026, 933 0252. 933-0372: Buainata. Circulation, Advertising 933-1163. Subscription rates: 025 per yaar; 112.60 per semester. The Campus Governing Council shsll have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate all revenue derived from tha Student Activities Fee (1.1.14 of the Student Constitution). Tha Daily Tar Heel Is a student organization. Tha Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise or turn away copy rt considers objec tionable. The Daily Tar Heel will not consider ad justments or payment for any typographical errors or erroneous insertion unless notice ia given to the Business Menagarwrthin(1oneday after the advertisement appears, within (1 ) day of receiving the teer sheets or subscription of the paper. The Duly Tar Heel will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion of an adver tisement scheduled to run severel times. Notice for such correction mutt be given before the next insertion. Claire Ragley Business Manage Dan Collins Advenisma Manaysr p resent at ion