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2 The Daily Tsr HecSThursday.rApn! 30.V1981 ,; 3 t r f : - ( . 1 I Or -f?- t 1 4 H t i Li U 71 o 4Zi i TT Cy KAHEN HAYWOOD Staff Wrtler When exams are over, it's time to go horns, to the beach, to the mountains, or to a summer job. But if stu dents do want their mail and do not want to pay for phone service they don't use, it is also time to file a change of address and have the phone disconnected. In addition to these complications, apartment dwellers have to consider subletting their apartments, and stu dents who do not want tolug home the entire contents of their room or apartment need to think of storage. Each summer thousands of undeliverable pieces' of mail arrive at the post office. Chapel Hill Postmaster Fred Reigher said in a news release.. "Students receiving magazines and hometown news papers, present the biggest problem," Reigher said. He said all students, whether dorm or community resi dents, should 'immediately file' change-of-address cards with all of their correspondents, including publishing houses, and should estimate their change-of-address stay according to dormitory closing, final exams, and com- m :er.t exercises. Dorm resident assistants have distributed telephone disconnect cards to be mailed back to Southern Bell, said Jody Harpster, UNC housing associate director of resi dence life. Students can also give the cards to their area directors and Southern Bell will pick them up. Dorra residents can call Southern Bell to have then phones disconnected, said Jim Erogden, assistant mana ger of the residence department at Southern Bell. Other students should call a Southern Bell service rep resentative (933-5421) and say they want service discon nected, Ercgden saidf. They can drop their telephones off for a five-dollar credit cn their final bill, or Southern Bell will pick them up for no credit. Starting May 8, people having their phones discon nected can also drop them off at Foto Express, at the en trance to Can Mill Mall and at Bailey's Mini Cleaners at University Mall, Crcgden said. Area apartment complexes have different policies on subletting apartments. '':.-' King's Arms apartments does net allow summer sub lets unless one resident is going to live in the apartment all summer, said Jacqueline Patterson, whose husband is manager of King's Arms. If the tenant is living in the apartment for the summer, he can bring in roommates, she said, but Ke is responsi ble for the apartment. At Carolina and Old Well apartments, a person wanting to sublet from a present tenant has to fill out an application and have it approved at the office, although requirements are not as rigid, office secretary Lori Underwood said. Robert Wells Jr., Manager of Berkshire Manor Apart ments, said the complex did not allow sublets unless the rent came from the original tenant. The tenant would also have to know who would be in the apartment, Wells said. .:. A person subletting at Camelot Apartments would have to fill out an application and be approved just like a person on a lease, Camelot manager Al Meyers said. Many of the apartment complexes had two different forms of subletting, one if the person on the lease plan ned to come back, and another if the person on the lease was leaving for good. - If the tenant plans to return, then he is responsible for the apartment. But if he is not coming back, then the new tenant assumes the lease and the responsibility. This is the case at Kingswood Apartments, said mana ger Brent Bobbitt. If the original tenant is not returning, the sublease becomes an assignment, and the complex checks the new resident out as thoroughly as for a nor mal lease. But with a conventional sublet, the tenant is still responsible, and there is no need to check the summer tenant as thoroughly, Bobbitt said. - At Tar Heel Manor, tenants in a sublet situation have to sign the lease, but the original tenant is still responsible for the apartment, assistant manager Annette Evans , said. Foxcroft Apartments allows subletting if the paper work is done through Foxcroft's office, according to The Southern Part of Heaven?, an annual publication of the Student Consumer Action Union. Russ Perry, associate housing director for operations, described' storage on campus as a nightmare. He des cribed storage as a feast or famine situation, saying some dorms, like Old East and Alexander,' have no storage space and others, like Cobb, have more than they will ever need. Perry said Housing is considering a proposal to limit the size of boxes to be stored. Another proposal calls for storage on an area rather than a building basis for next year. ; - . Storage is free, but stored goods must be in a sealed box, with a storage slip attached, Harpster said. Uni versity Housing is not responsible for lost or stolen property. Students may leave refrigerators in their rooms if they will be living in that room the following fall. The refrig erators should be unplugged and cleaned out, and stu dents should get storage slips for them, Harpster said. Students who will be here for summer school can also leave articles packed in boxes in the room closet, but floor space must be clear. Since people can get in and out of the storage areas and the rooms, the University does not encourage people to leave things here, Harpster said. People steal calculators, stereos, refrigerators thing except books, he said. any- " People from .neighboring communities come over like scavengers. They walk around trying all the doors," he said.'. - Little' welf&re -frmud found m .the-siat r.. iiTfTf"? 4E LONG Suit V5r President Ronald Reagan is eager to cut welfare benefits not only to balance the budget, but to try to reduce welfare fraud a solution which some local officials said would not be effective in North Carolina. "North Carolina has always had a very low, low rate of fraud end abuse," said June Milby, director of public informa tion at the North Carolina Department of Human Resources. "In this state, I don't think it would help (reduce fraud) at all." The Reagan administration wants to change the way eligibility for welfare is assessed as a way to disqualify people who are receiving aid illegally from two or three different programs. In the state, 48 percent of the popula tion is below the federal poverty line of $6,990 for a family of four, including children, Milby said. But not all receive welfare benefits, she said. The Department of Health and Human Resources' preliminary estimates are that 523,000 welfare recipients, could lose $41.7 million out of $150 million distri buted monthly. Another estimate puts the number of recipients who cheat at less than 2 percent. Milby said the rate of fraud in the state was low because North Carolinians "are; basically very honest people." About 5,300 people receive welfare benefits each month in Orange County, said Martin Whitt, income maintenance ; supervisor for Orange County Social Ser vices. Whitt said that in the largest wel fare program Aid to Families with Dependent Children there would be few major changesBut the department, does not know how many people could lose some or all welfare benefits. "We won't know until they pass the final budget," Whitt said. Whitt said that fraud was a problem, but he said more people are being taken to court for welfare fraud than ever before, "By tightening up eligibility, we might be able to weed out some of these people," Whitt said. ,Feceive statement on ciree! The Orange Water and Sewer Authority has received from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers the final environmental impact statement on the Cane Creek re servoir project. The statement was pre sented to the OWASA Board of Directors at the meeting of the whole committee at noorr On Wedsssdayv The report discussed by board members at a later meeting. . The five board members in attendance Wednesday met in executive session for much of the SO-minute meeting. Discus sion in the executive session centered on OWASA personnel and property acqui? sition matters. Annexation of the Mason Farm waste water treatment plant area by the town oLQhapeLHill, changes in .an industrial pfe-treatment' engineering contract bn trie :r 'plant' arid "pbssibfe'' Caifborozonmg' , changes were the main topics discussed in the open section of the meeting. , Because of the length of the executive session, the board did not have time to discuss several items which were on its agenda for Wednesday, including discus sions on OWASA's budget for fiscal year 1982 and on the possibility of purchasing the American Stone Quarry west of Carrboro. . Moreau said that OWASA's Iwoyear -? lease-purchase ..pption., agreement on the , quarry would expire this summer or fall, and that a decision on purchasing the quarry would have to made before then. MELINDA PLYMALE. Fall Semester begins Aug .19 The 1981 Fall Semester officially begins for upperclassmen on Aug. 19 at. 8 a.m. Pre-registered students can pick up their schedules August 19-21, from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Dorms open at noon Aug. 19. The first day of classes will be Aug. 24. The official drop-add period will be Aug. 21-28, with Aug. 28 marking the first of the PassFail declaration period. The General College will be closed Sept. 7 for Labor Day; no classes will be held. Fall break will be Oct. 16-Oct. 21. Thanksgiving recess will be Nov. 25-Nov. 30. Fall Semester classes end on Dec. 4 and Reading Day is on Dec. 7. ' p " , '' To increase rape awareness 'Tmk2 me Nm f ihwrc in " if By MELINDA PLYMALE Staff Writer The Orange County Rape Crisis Center is sponsoring its se cond annual "Take Back the Night" march Saturday to call com munity attention to the problem of rape and violence against women in Orange County. Those interested in participating in the march will meet at the Bell Tower parking lot at 9 p.m. The march itself will begin at about 9:30 p.m. It will conclude at 10:30 p.m. at the corner of Main and Roberson streets in Carrboro, where a rally featuring local women musicians and poets will be held. Workshops cn.a variety of topics associated with rape will be conducted by Rape Crisis Center volunteers from 2-7 p.m. Saturday at the Chapel of the Cross, 304 East Franklin St. Acquaintance rape, assertiveness and women's self-defense will be among the topics covered. Rape Crisis Center director Janet Colm said that about 500 people participated in last year's march, and the workshops were attended by about 150. Participation of 500-1000 people is expected for this year's activities. Colm said that reports of rape to both law enforcement agencies and the center decreased dramatically after last year's march, going from 14 reports to the center between Jan. 1 and April 18, 1980, to three between April 18 and June 30, I9S0. Several other activities related to women's protection educa tion are planned for the future in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro area. Colm said that the Rape Crisis Center was hoping to run a self defense course in July, and was planning a rape education program to be instituted in grades 4-12 in the public schools next year. The Rape Crisis Center is a volunteer organization, and re-, ceives funding for its activities from Orange County, the towns of Chapel Hill and Carrboro and the United Fund. Ned Comar, a University Police officer who has written a booklet on female assault, complimented the work of the Rape Crisis Center, and said that its program had helped a great deal In making women more aware of the problems associated with rape. Comar said that the University was making some improvements on the campus to increase safety for women, as well as students in general. The lighting on Stadium Drive is being updated and brightened, and a security booth near the Bell Tower has been installed and should be completed and Faini-Oty Day to bs Saturday The Cane Creek Conservation Authority, in conjunction with the Orange Alive Festival, will hold its annual Farm-City Day in the Orange Grave community Saturday. ' The community-wide open house will con tinue from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. at the Orange Grove. Community Building on Orange Grove Road. The day's events will include, among other things, crafts demonstrations, farm tours, a milking demonstration, pony rides and animal pettings, music and dancing and local history exhibits. Walking and bus tours of the Cane Creek area also will be offered. Barbeque, home-baked goods and refresh ments will be on sale throughout the day. Orange Grove Road is located 6.5 miles west of Carrboro ot. 54, and the community building is just .. ht of Cane Creek Fire station. Directional signs will be posted and admission is free. occupied within a month. c Classified ads may be placed at the DTH Offices or mailed to the DTH Carolina Union 065A, Chapel Hill, NC 27514. 3 u'erdj cr kss Ay V kit arit m&l'.SoHtil 4 I.C3 mm b t4 4 tae tgp 1 9 p&tmt 4:ront t. rem 9 townutk 4y t i- F4gi Vary Gm-i TAKE EACK Tl IZ NIGS IT Second Annual March to protest rsp and violeac cgalnrt teomca. Saturday May 2 uwkkhop 2-7 pra at Chapd f Th Ctom. March begins) 9 pm h orn B3 Tower paikk3 lot. Ril'y with muSc and poetry 10:23 pra t Out tVA. Cm.ll Th Women Center fcr mort Ifilorrsatkm 545-4S45 YZZl 'om tttm ti ii .!:! yem! Com t& Dili c-,'.'- w tm s-tci!!U t st Tu i:L 19 ! ft t&?y S3, T1S2 CLOSET 13 A IONZXY FLACX. Join other mm brs'.nnlnj to tipbrt thtlt cty eu&!. Croup k;f st s.ii f it iismnn. CrcLn Gay AMOctetkM 92"MW7 (bfar 10 pm) Mark. Tn4::o-.v,T.r-x n.' mliiet ttu e-pt tt i3mf J.jJ.-y t!jtH-;.h Zit&ii'f. ll ten 10-!JJ;"3 each J c&3 Sa tt Z do tc::mi:::d vztnx n::: tu::rr:? rkiH. ca Mrt m t::tits i t or LOST: 2 gray large marull envelope containing potee nnd m rousH draft. Reward ofTred. Call 4 or kavc mestase hit.F&uU Dale In tjn&lA QZ. . . ..'.".." '.' . " LOST! Man's braided fiver mSAng band In the vicinity of Davie IUX XZl.CJ rtSard. Call Davtd at SSM 222. ' ' ' -5 LOST 'Set I key wUh SuLhi Cardinal Footba3 Helmet on tt. If knmd pk&n call S33-2 443 om. TKana. FOUND Bke carnera fcnmd on a3 oi:ilia VVlIioa Library. UcU?y and claim at VV.Ion OrculaSan Desk. FOL'N-D: YOUH METAL DETECTOS In hmh at the C' J tt'e3 C3 Steve at 933-1W1 and describe. Tines t: :. tv?tfiu'Jt r-'-u at rt;.:Dra dcltl&tsclix. tisvi llmw atarta at 4:C9. . W 4s HELP NEEDED fat main tain in? sidn and grtMinda about 4 hotmweek over ummer. Ca3 9 42-2 SOI alter 6 p.m. Keep trying. CAM? POSITIONS to New England. SwlmmUig: Ffehin: Bacb3. Cakctball; TennU; Water SUinj; Video-taping. Send Reaume: Camp Mah-Kee-Nac. 23 Allen Court, South Orange, New Jertey CT079. WE TYPE STUBLNT PAfOlS. 0m, and dkertatkR. CX-rr fvTteta tnture yta prc)ect i3 be ready ea time. 10 diacownt (at a3 and l&ertati0fl. Aarea literary Servicet, fC..3 PUii. 967 1270. cay mate stTporrr cr.ours he aumffsft. lor f r.trfi irtettilsi . ahartnj pT ii';-porl arHp-1 f--roflal kiura. Carosa Cay Aiv54' i ' .. (biwe 13 pm) Mailt. ;i ty t'.ftwS M-y 11 t: a! 1 V 13-S. ,1 WA?rrn: non smo:::ng m ji.5 a ut n N paid LPA tra:).j a; n. : -. n the UNC Qt mpm. TofJ t me : r-" inrnt l 13-15 hon bKiySn3 ttt ,'tl. totitm.tfH l$ C1f iima. We fteJ t ' , i' iW, a-e 1S--43 o aS'- aivd i K. '-,-ver. Ca3 8-5 Hd.Frt. lx aort l- J -rma ', 5-1253. ?, il. rat tl.Um if:; nv:r.rr.rTt" ::-iAr icif.r'i A' - t.. ri. J kj i, ' -t V t J '- i ( il'irli V Z I ' y i V Kit ' t t. f. t-.-t f :i! ii L'jft a.:.h a I M t' r '.' Kill'.'. :: I j..t a ij U'g' rJ, kt'ih m te t.rai,v.r.e peit ' MhmI rauL-. t "ett 1s.f y U Imi4. ca3 t,;7. ha : a j i (if .: V! m rr-;;4..- ry, 1 1 ' t, CrS . sT nLe irj i. j tdsT; 1f:i at 1 1 !:. : , ' tt i fii,ji( h8 I I sat Ui, j(t If t .J unco: t ur.'C stlt.ts. W a! Cay S3 & Swap woutd t-ke to make yoar acquaintance. A Kp tit of every. Mjv. Yard aaka d.:'y. Lola ckI.! t ewda tf yur eve?-J y ner i. S .ve mw, rtif t-le, ct'ffte oa tSewn lt aaaiut a deaL nry ra;ih-.3. tki! pafitof aV. f!3-S73 in!Tcti-A IS-SCI & siih Ltvd. Mpa of Chat! i:.3 & Carrtyxo fatal Leee UtrtBtorattp. Call 3S3Ci84 la Un&iet for mra laftsevsatSaAL, COT Tl2 MUNCIiXS? crate4 calt tr a ft:iAl arcaaioa? We sLe great deaaerta and e di DowUa U lche!; $:i tCt$ off IMMEDIATE rMPLOYMf NTRAtriCll Comf i,fr Iffbt ith iirbt 'v( i n . t ' 1 ' t t Mr trut cr" :--. ''! I i I PiJ HAVING I !'' THOUriE V..".5Tlfw Yf ' t t, ' t r.-. t '. :e r ' - ;i!U 1 to i ,. .. . ., r .. i- ' Sutcliffe admits he is Hipper a. . LONDON (AP) Truck driver Peter Sutcliffe admitted Wednesday that he was the Yorkshire Ripper, the killer of 13 women and namesake of one of history's most notorious murderers. But he pleaded innocent at London's historic Old Bailey Criminal Court to murder charges, and said he was not responsible for his actions. ' Sutcliffe said he was guilty of manslaughter, pleading grounds of "dimin ished responsibility," or lack of mental competence. The judge expressed "grave anxieties" about Sutciiffe's plea and ordered a jury trial to decide whether Sutcliffe committed manslaughter or murder. Sutcliffe is to stand trial before a jury in the Old Bailey next Tuesday. The bearded Sutcliffe, 34, showed no emotion during Wednesday's reading of the charges against him, glancing only briefly at his wife, Sonia, as he left the dock flanked by four prison officers. Sixty arrested in drag bust RALEIGH (AP) Police arrested more than 60 people Wednesday, including two football players at North Carolina State University, culminating an un dercover drug operation in the Raleigh area. Police Sgt. Brantley Peoples said officers expected to arrest 85 people on a total of 320 felony charges and nine misdemeanor charges for the sale, con spiracy to sell or possession with intent to sell marijuana, heroin, cocaine and several other drugs. Among those arrested was Ronnie Dean Shaylik, 19, of Raleigh, and Michael Anthony Quick, of Hamlet. Shavlik was a freshman tight end for the Wolfpack and Quick was a rising senior and three-year starter for the team. Lederer resigns from Congress PHILADELPHIA (AP) U:S. Rep. Raymond F. Lederer, D-Pa., said Wednesday that he was resigning from Congress effective May 5 because of his conviction in the Abscarri -bribery, scandal, according to a statement read by his lawyer. c i v ; Lederer was not present when his attorney, James Binns, read the statement to reporters. ' l: Binns, who defended Lederer on charges he took a $50,000 bribe from an FBI agent posing as a representative, of a fictitious Arab sheik, said he didn't know where his client was. : Lederer was first elected to Congress in 1976 and was the only one among six U.S. representatives involved in'the Abscam case who was re-elected last November. ' ' " , Brady develops complications Cf. .Oil WASHINGTON (AP) White House press secretary James S. Brady Bas been confined to a reclining position in his hospital bed for the next 10 days to two weeks because of renewed leakage of air into his brain, the White House reported Wednesday. . " '.'1t ? The latest complication in Brady's recovery from a bullet wound thr)Gh the brain developed Monday but was not disclosed until mid-day Wednesday when the White House press office issued a scheduled medical bulletin on his condition. Dead From page 1 been to more than 30 Dead concerts, and every one of them was special," he says. "One time I saw them and they played for seven ho-a;s ... the shortest I ever heard them play, was three hours. There's 'noranorher band that ptays'that? long; "o hiH?imul "The" assoaation "of 4Cratef ul bead' "mtfsfc' with psychedelic drugs began in the band's early days, when it played for the "acid tests" given by Ken Kesey's Merry. Prank sters. Colorful garb, including dozens of different T-shirts, and more colorful a.ntics of Dead fans now are as much a part of the show as Jerry Garcia's guitar jammimg. "A lot of the people who go to Dead concerts probably are high, and a lot of those probably are on psychedclics," says One fan. "When you're on LSD, it's easier to get into the magic of them." With or without drugs, the concert experience seems to be at the core of the obsession of "hard-core" Deadheads, who take off for months at a time to fol'low the group around the country and wangle front row seats for every show. Even those who wait for the Dead to come to them talk about concerts as "magical," because of a strong audience-band rapport that many say cuts through standard barriers separating performers from spectators. Phil Larson, a computer programmer for a Research Triangle Park firm, treated five friends to last year's Dead concert in Greens boro just for the fun of sharing one of his favorite experiences. Explaining his liking for the band is hard for him, though, "You can't really explain the Grateful Dead, and you shouldn't even try," he says. "Most people either love them or they're totally in different to them. The people who love them talk about the concerts they've seen and their favorite songs. It just seems like there's a tacit understanding between them. , Though he sees "Deadhead" as a label ap- . plied by others, Larson says Dead fans are "magical kind of people." magical ' atmosphejeu-Thc .thing j about.-.!? ' Grateful- Dead is that there's no bullshit to them. The band won't always be leading the show you can go around the audience and find different people leading their own shows at different times, and it all comes together into one big experience." Jim Howcrton of Chapel Hill saw his first Grateful Dead concert outdoors at Duke Uni versity in 1970 and has been to four others since. "Deadhead" is a cute nickname, Howcrton says, but it doesn't apply to fans who are drawn to the band simply out of musical interest. "My enthusiasm peaked a few years ago, but I'll always have a soft spot in my heart for the Dead and need a good dose of them , from time to time," he says. "Their style doesn't seem to have changed much over the years, but it's still best when it's live." Howcrton says he knows people who have followed the Dead around the country for weeks, but points out that most major rock acts have similar followings. "The main attraction for me is that the Dead have a lot of roots in music that's indigenous to America Appalachian folk music, ja?z, . blucgrass, 20th century, rock and so on. A lot of their songs have that traditional folk" sound. "The Grateful Dead is a unique band in that it interacts with so many kinds of music and so many people that approach tends to have a lasting appeal," Art Goodyn says. "What's going on now is not a revival so much & that if you play well constantly and keep doing it and doing it, sooner or later people will tome around." All ads must be prepaid. Deadline: Ad must be received by 12 (noon) one business day before ad is to run. BILL BEEflMAN. Photographer. PtmtetMJ mad profloniJ gktre t crititi with family or Irlamd. O&tdoor tr ail of yowr tbooilaz. 113 ! p to IVi Uor pmt pUtm 1113. CaU 942-1532 912-7523. fmw rrrva!lota pan. HUMAN SLXUAUTY l.Nf OP.MATIOM and Cowfr3 SrtvW a offer Cotmwiinj aid rrtrrral on contraception, iUtknh!p, prtananry, homoru!iry, and venrrcal rfia. Call 9 33-5 SOS of drop ty SU B. Uf.k. HALE nOOMMATE. rK-ntmoking. nJd tt wmrnr mn<x fail. $100 (4ua Vj unlMe. Kinj3aroo4, gfKd tu, pool. Laundry. AC. C 11 Utm or fimt.k Ufvry. V67-3SOO. V33-3W6. ROOMMATE NEEDED f OH HOUSE 2 from caropv on bw&nm. Prlvai hniimm, a' covd.:krtted. aSrrdryT, tig yard. S7)mifih ply Vi C3 or 3-7142, ROOMMATE WANTED TO that twA,iU homa 4 from tmns. i mi p rtt-fted. tlCO-ttS month!, ui'.iuf pid. ( ttdof, rd own Ca3 933-6122. Ask kx Tim. .WANTE D MAIL tlOOM MATES io Kvi moLSa horn 6 w l nt-mh tA Chapl HJJ. T tx MffmT, on kx tsStpf i"f, Mt V mmmAinf. mta ItOSKKAtS. Ut .:.! Summit ttt.it at;att. C3 Pv4 IIOU'-iHATE M i I-.' 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 30, 1981, edition 1
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