Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 11, 1981, edition 1 / Page 3
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Wednesday, February 11. 1931Th5 Dsity Tar H :c!3 9 J i; t 3 ft) ""u O Cy AN DUE A STEMPEIt SSaff Wdier ,' " 'J When world fcrr.ous tennis player Arthur Ashe came to UNC Monday night, instead of his familar white tennis outfit, he wore a blue suit, and instead of talking tennis, his main topic was insurance. Ashe is a representative for the Aetna Life and Casualty Insurance Co. His talk was sponsored by the UNC Job Placement Office. His job involves speaking to students, especially minorities, about opportunities in the insurance field. "We need black life insurance arents to take care of the needs of black people. Blacks have special problems related to insurance," Ashe said during his talk in Great Hall of the Carolina Union. He played for 15 years until a heart attack in July 1979 halted his playing career. "A heart attack changes your life," Ashe said. "I miss playing in the center court of Wimbledon, but nothing else. There is no bigger feather to put in your cap," Ashe's life has not slowed down, though. He works for ABC sports, has several columns in newspapers and magazines, owns seven tennis shops, and is captain of the Davjs Cup team. He g3ve some of his views on tennis and sports in today's world. "We have a (on tfn By DIANE LUPTON Arthur Ashe different breed of athletes. They're not as respectful of authorities. It's symptomatic of a whole new way of looking at things," Ashe said. "I only feel sorry for the next generation. The present generation is bent on milking the game dry. The hill with those who follow." D vo v omini cvnn jtts o th hi torn! Staff V,r;:cr Several Chapel Hill residents expressed their objections to a joint planning agreement proposed for Chapel Hill, Carrboro, the Orange Water and Sewer Authority and Orange County at a public hearing before the Town Council Monday night. , Fear that the county would have too much power under the agreement, which would give the County Commissioners final say on planning proposals involving all four governing bodies, was the main concern. Local developer Watts Hill Jr. described the agreement as, "four partners to a shotgun marriage and what comes out as a child is going to be stillborn at best." Several supporters, however, urged the council to agree to the proposal which has been under committee study for about a year and a half so that the town would formally commit itself to oversee the rapidly growing areas on its perimeter. Now, all outlying areas are solely under county jurisdiction. In other action, the council deadlocked 4-4 on a zoning ordinance policy that would allow drive-in businesses only in shopping centers of 25,000 feet or more. The ordinance now has no policy to guide the council in deciding whether to grant or deny special-use .permits for proposed drive-ins. Mayor Joe Nassif opposed the policy, saying it would not give the council the power to exercise any discretion over where drive-ins - would be allowed. But council member Bev Kawalec said she favored the plan as a way to prevent drive-in "strips" lining the highways . into town. Contract bus drivers, who work for the town for less than 1,000 hours per year, spoke to the council about their desire to receive some of the benefits the regular payroll part-time workers had. John Romanqrjolemanfpr the contract , drivers, said the contract employees I sometimes i.-uicjl.tc. i"hCu:Tttaa' thel I.t-r part-time drivers, yet were not eligible to receive health insurance or sick-leave benefits. No action was taken by the council on their request. Oy TED AVERY . Staff Writer Surveys, by the Carolina Course Review will be suspended for the next two semesters because of problems with the computation of data, coordinator Ellen Starr said Tuesday. Starr said the problems occurred when she was forced to use a new program because a conflict with the computation center resulted in the loss of eight data tapes. The computation, center sent back the tapes because the review organization owed $517 in a conglomeration of bills dating back to 1976, Starr said. Although money was appropriated by CGC to pay off the debt, the tapes were sent back by the center to the Carolina Union desk, where they were lost. Consequently, Starr had to employ, a computer expert from Raleigh to reprogram the data. Data from the reprogramming was rescanned by computers and proven' to be invalid, Starr said. Incorrect data was evident in the review printed for this semester's use. A group of. sociology professors have signed a petition protesting their scores on, the review. - Starr said the .problem of jnaccuraCy in the percentile rankings was compounded by professors not responding to surveys. "A department can say 'Yes' (to giving students review questionnaires), but individual professors can refuse," Starr said. ' An example of this incongruity happened when 95 English I sections were given surveys, and only 18 were returned, Starr said. She said less successful professors tend not to hand out the surveys and, as a result, good professors would only be compared to excellent ones. Year of the 'Rooster Cclfthrnta the Chinese New Yerf ' with a rislieiom Chinese rUnnr nt At Thp Golden Dragon Downtown E. Frchklin Open Mon.-Sat. 1 1 :00 am-8:00 pm dosed Sunday Eat in or Take Out: lunch dinner snack We feature authentic Chinese food dsllciously prepared f 1 t - X AJ -' Cxi . f 1 ' 6s J I f ' f V 7fD r a v g u v. C 4 r? mm c J II f i Mil n (i ) ) M I ! f ! X1 - ' vTv - 3 1 V J 1 4 Order Early from Thell's! 8" and 10" Heart Layer Calces with any message o Half and whole Sheet Calces with hearts Valentine Cookies Fun Cco!:ies heart-shaped, dipped in icina or suoar coated Cupcakes with hearts Petit Fours with hearts r Valentine Gingerbread Men " . yv r V - x .. J 4 - J 1S - . , rf' i. 3 - V i l?-9 Cy LVfiN FEITIL! AN Staff Writer Three months past its scheduled distribution date, the 19C0 Ycckety Yack is supposed to arrive Monday morning. The .Ycck 'was originally, scheduled to arrive in early November, and then during the Christmas holidays, but because of under-estimatiens in the budget and loss of pro duction time last summer, the yearbook was delayed. The 19C0 Ycck Editor, Mary Beth Searle, said the year book was scheduled to arrive Monday morning. Searle said the. 'SO Yack ended last school year "$10,000 under what we had budgeted." The staff had met its first semester budget requirements, but . when sales during se cond semester dropped off, it ended the year under budget. "Sales in the spring semester were not what we projected," Searle said. . The remainder of the money had to be raised over last summer. This time is usually used for production of the beck, such as doing layout and writing copy. Th; tion time was moved back, the bock arrived laie at the publisher and the bock has arrived late to the students. The 1S31 Yackeiy Ycck will arrive Sept. 25, said Cathy Robinson, this year's editor. "It will be on time ... I think the students have a right to have a book on time," she said. . Distribution for the '0 Ycck will be on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Great Hall balcony of the Carolina Union. "Everyone who ordered a book must present their ID.and a receipt when possible," Searle said. Those who have not' ordered a bock and would like to buy one, may put their name on the waiting list in Suite C of the Union. Searle said there would be approximately 150 books left over to be ".SC'd. ' , "Books that have been ordered will be held for 15 days after delivery ... after that we are no longer responsible for holding them." 9 Ey TA?,C.IY WXaGIlT:- ' " .' Staff Writer, . People interested in participating In a Federal Summer Internship Program need to see a staff member of the Pre-Career Experience Program (P.E.P.) in Nash Hall by the first of next week. The deadline for summer positions with the N.C. internship program is Friday. The positions available in FSIP will be related to administrative,, professional and technical career fields. The program is designed for students who would returning to school in the fall, so they can tell ether students interested in similar subjects about it. P.E.P. is a service for undergraduate and graduate students interested in information about carreer-reiated summer jobs or internships. It is a resource center with . directories, pamphlets and application forms concerning jobs across the nation, Ruth Bernstein, director of P.E.P., said. "I can only encourage students to use this service and to do so as soon as possible," she said. Sophomores or above, with 3 .0 grade point averages or better, and graduate students in the upper half of their class, are eligible to apply for intern positions. "There are special programs withm P.E.P." Bernstein said. "The jobs are not just clerical, but are related to what the students are interested in." Students must attend one 45-minute. orientation meeting to register with" P.E.P. The meetings give information on the services of the program and how to look for summer jobs. Students are registered with P.E.P. so their names can be referred to employers. Spring orientation meetings begin Thursday and last through March 23. For insightful analyses of that's going on around the University-and around the world, read Locally," "The State " and "At Large" every Friday on the Vis Dally Tar Heel editorial page. A mingto. . . ''-.''Chapel' Hill! ' Opening TOMORROW -V Try licrj Crciry Zcc!;o ':: ' Ml ICC Permits formerly Fcsdlck's Offset Printing 'HE LOOM PRESS. YES! Experience. Reputation. Esprit. Caring. TOP QUALITY DESIGN Typesetting Logos Laminating Letterheads Resumes Invitations Brochures Posters Booklets 5' per Kodah Quick Copy 500 West Rosemary-Chapel Hill 919-942-6582 let Ik Pa Vnr Portrvnnl Printer f '' In Our Seventh Year 7 Zll iO;' k ; f-'L fv ) i&fH XSJZ 11. -SW(&(5) $ ii(QM . w I m-.. i r cr.::x Full 0 fin of Uytiia fij. bwii Ccny Fio Filler 21 cz. ' . . . v. v 1 1 SJ CIs:!c Pcpp:r 4 cz; ...... ... 1 ... . . Lur.:::n L!::! 12 cz. .'.) ii.CU V;:.3 CI:-3 ' ' ' Ci j CwtT! 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 11, 1981, edition 1
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