2The Daily Tar HeelWednesday, August 26, 1981 Co umcilapp ro ves po lie eh uildiug app rah a I By RAC HKI. PKRKY IH1I Sufi Wrilir In a 6-3 vote that followed lively debate, the Chapel Hill Town Council approved a resolution Monday night to have the old police building on Rosemary Street ap praised for both sale and lease value. In other action, the council passed a resolution that would require the deve lopers of Timberlyne Office Park South WELCOME BACK STUDENTS FREE IWSTALLATIOW of Alert Cable TV and the Movie Channel 24 Hour a Day with this coupon ($12.00 value) Offer Good In Carrboro Cabled Areas Only. Expires Sept. 7 SS7-3025 204 W. Main St. Carrboro Classified Info Return ad and check or money order to the DTH office by noon the business day before your ad is to run. Ads must be prepaid. Rates: 25 words or less Students $2.00 ; , Non-students $3.00 , 5 (or each additional word $1.00 more for boxed ad or boldface type Please notify the DTH office immediately if there are mistakes in your ad. We will be responsible for only the first ad run.- announccmcnts '. CELEBRATE OURSELVES:. A ' WEEKEND RETREAT IN a natural environment with L'Chaim, Aug. 28-30. Sponsored by UNC Hillel. Call for inforegistration. 942-4057. CAROLINA UNION HOUSE STAFF MEETING TODAY (Wednesday) Union 207-209. 5:00 p.m. Must attend to work fall semester. CAKE FAIRIES DELIVER CAKES IN STYLE. Home-baked from scratch. Any occasion, message. Birthdays a specialty song, candle included. $17. Call the Fairies (evenings) 968-4306. SANDELL DANCE STUDIO - 1717 LEGION ROAD. Evening classes in Ballet aaj Tap for .adults with Ronnie Sue MandeL Jazz with Rosemary Howard. Beginning, Intermediate and advanced levels. Register now. Telephone 942-5512 or 929-7394. SAFt: DIET PILL-SPIRULINA-FOR superior health, dynamic energy, weight loss, fasting. Completely natural. Food of the Future. Distributorships also available. Call Rex Mercer, 929-2786. STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE IS OFFERING A four week weight management group emphasizing positive lifestyle behaviors beginning Monday, September 14 from 10:30-noon, limited to students less than 25 pounds overweight. Call 966-2281 (Ext. 275) for a screening interview. THE YOGA PLACE. 452 W. Franklin St.. will ofTtf 8 weekly classes for beginning and continuing students Sept. 7 - Oct. 22 and Oct. 28 - Dec. 1 7. For information and registration, 967-9686. $21. I Part time or full time. r Must be at least 18. Ov Must have own car and insurance. N Commissions and tips. Apply in person after 4:00 503 W. Rosemary St. Chapel Hill 929-0246 207 Oberlin Rd. Raleigh 821-2330, N. 746 Ninth St. jA 1977 P(SITSniS. u to widen Weaver Dairy Road into four lanes along their property line by 1986. The council also agreed to formulate a .building code for condominiums. Representatives of several community organizations urged the council not to sell the old police building, but to lease it to non-profit community organizations in stead. "We're concerned about the selling of an old colonial structure in the center of 1 J MR. K'S MUSIC show features a live disc jockey playing rock, disco, pop and new wave for any size party. Call 942-5293 for reasonable prices. CAROLINA UNION PERFORMING ARTS COMMITTEE WILL have a short meeting from 3:30-4:00 in Union Annex 220, this Thursday. Please be prompt. CAROLINA UNION TECH CREW MEETING TODAY (Wednesday) Union 217 5:G0 p.m. must attend to work fall, semester. ALL FOUND ADS ARE placed free of charge in the DTH. lost & found LOST - BLUE - LIGHT BLUE REVERSIBLE rain coat. Taken from SAE house. Contains set of keys on an Aigner chain. Call 933-5947. K.S. FOUND: A LADIES DIGITAL WATCH, at front of post office on Franklin Street. Call and identify ' 967-6640 during evenings, 966-1161 during' day, ask Jim Donahue. LOST FRIDAY AT PEABODY: Brown ladies wallet with tan stripe. If found keep money but return wallet to Gill 214 Parker or call 933-2771 LOST SET OF KEYS on a blue plastic key ring. Call 933-4659. M.P. DONT PANIC ANY LONGER. 1 found your gray hard contacts on Wednesday. Call 933-1415. help wanted Volunteer for U.S. Environmental Protection Agency research. Earn $50-565 upon completion of experiment which measures the effects of 2 hour level ozone exposure. Earn S50-S75 in an experiment to study the effects of low levels of gaseous and particulate air poUutents. Numerous other minor studies are always ongoing. Levels of poUutents are low with no known long term adverse effects, and all research is approved by the Human Rights Committee of the UNC Medical School. Pay is $5.00 per hour. We need healthy, non-smoking males, age 18-40 with no history of allergies or hay fever. Call for more information, 8-5 Mon-Fri., 966-I253. LOOK GOOD IN PICTURES? Agency seeks photogenic women for advertising promotion. Gtxxi pay, flexible hours. Call between K-l I p.m. Imparl Servkes, 214692-1440. Portfolio unnecessary. PART-TIME SALES CIRK. TW Sh. Factory, a men's and women's sdf-MfVMf outlet shoe store needs someone to work nights and weekends for 16 hours a week. Apply mi mh vn at The Shoe Factory. Eastgale Shopping C.eir?i, Chapel Hill. 7-7445. town," said Betty Caldwell, president of the Chapel Hill Preservation Society. Mary Ellen Bowers, president of the Chapel Hill Historical Society, said com munity groups would make a committed effort to cooperate with the town in re habilitation of the building. . "Selling the valuable downtown pro perty takes it out of the town's hands," she said. Chapel Hill has received requests from the Orange County Women's Center and from the Chief District Court for long term use of space in the old building, said town Planning Director Mike Jennings. A public hearing should be held in November, he said. The old police building presently houses the Orange County Sheriffs offices and county emergency (911) services, along with offices for the town parking atten dants, said assistant town manager Sonna Loewnthal. "The building's condition is hot excel lent, and immediate renovation costs are between $30,000 and $60,000," she said. Council members disagreed over the need for an appraisal, of the building. Council members Marilyn Boulton, Jonathon Howes, "Bill Thorpe, Joe Herzenberg, Bev Kawalec and Jim Wallace voted for the appraisal. Council rnembers R.D. Smith, Joe Straley and Mayor Joe Nassif opposed the appraisal. "We don't need an appraisal; we just have to set the restrictions," Nassif said. "Those who wish to buy or lease will tell you how much it's worth." But council member Wallace disagreed. "There has to be a fairly direct corre FINANCIAL AID CHECKS Student Aid Off ice 300 Vance Hail Telephone: 982-8398 The Student Aid Office has changed procedures for the disburse ment of .financial 'aid checks in 1981-82. Checks will be prepared only after a student signs and returns to the Student Aid Office the award acceptance form and all necessary papers. Students should not expect to receive checks until the acceptance form has been received and processed. Fall semester checks will be disbursed on the second floor of the -Student Aid Office in Vance Hall from 8:00 A.M. until 5:00 P.M., according to the schedule listed below. A student must present registration form (class schedule) and any drop-add forms at the Student Aid Office before checks can be released. Dental and medi cal students must bring i.D. cards validated for the fall semester. Acceptance Forms . Received in Student Aid Office on or before: Financial Aid Checks Disbursed to: August 12 Dental, medical, law students All other students Last names A-E Last names F-L 0 1 :t Last names M:R Last names S-Z All students, make-up day All students All students All students All students All students r August 26 September 2 September 9 September 16 September 23 Work-Study job assignments for students who have returned ac ceptance forms can be obtained in the Student Aid Office during the week of August 24-28. Assignments completed after that week will be mailed to local addresses: HEY YOU! FEEL LIKE A CHAMP? Then Be Onel The Campus Y Tutorial Program Needs Volunteer to help in the local elementary, Jr. High, and Senior High Schools. For Info: Room 102 of the Y. MOTHER'S HELPER WANTED TO TAKE CARE of child and do light housekeeping. Need own car. Flexible hours good bucks. 967-4528 keep trying. PART-TIME WORK ON CAMPUS, stapling posters to bulletin boards. Choose your own schedule, 4-15 hours weekly. No selling your pay is based on the amount of material distributed. Our average campus rep earns $4-$7 per hour. This position requires the ability to work without supervision. For information, contact Jeanne Swenson, 500-3 rd Ave. W.. Seattle. Washington 98119, (206) 282-8111. WANTED: BABYSITTERS FOR 3-YEAR-OLD SON. Must have car 967-4528. PIZZA TRANSIT AUTHORITY is now hiring delivery persons. Must be 18 and have own car for delivery. Flexible schedule. Makes perfect part or full-time job. Apply in person after 4:00 pm at PTA. 300 W. Rosemary. for sale SAIL BAHAMAS DURING FALL BREAK. Experience unnecessary. $360 covers instruction, berth (13 available), food, ' transportation Ft. Lauderdale Bahamas and return. One week. Professional crew from International Field Studies. For information call Bob Daland 962-3041, 317 Hamilton Hall. 1980 Pontiac Sunbird 4-speed sunroof 11,500 miles excellent condition. 493-3388. NEW RECORDS BY LOCAL ARTISTS ON sale! Mike Cross, Blazers, X-Teens, Secret Service, Contenders, John Santa. Sunfire, and more. Noon to 5, Monday August 24th through Friday August 28th. Next to Foundation Bookstore on Rosemary Street. TEN SPEED BICYCLE. Good condition with new tires. $45. Call 967-6915 after 6 pm. TEN-SPEED SCHWINN VARSITY. 22" frame, male, yellow. $75.00. Keep calling 929-6125. FOR SALE: DOUBLE BED-MATTRESS, box . springs, and frame $50. Call 929-0060 after 6 pm. REFRIGERATOR! Don't rent and throw away that cash. Largest size allowed in dorm room! (6 cubic feet.) Call Amy 967-1356. Keep trying! FOR SALE: TWIN SIZE Restonk mattress and box springs with frame and headboard. Firm mattress. Like new. Call 967-6390. 1980 YAMAHA 400 CYCLE: purchased new April '81; 3400 miles: two helmets; $1650: evenings 967-8067 or 542-2353. lation between the value of the space and what you have to pay for it," he said. Council member Smith questioned the cost of the .appraisal, estimated to be $1,300. "(Why) can't we get a local, cheaper appraisal?" he asked. The unofficially chosen appraiser is not a local appraiser, said interim town man ager Ron Secrist. "It's someone very skilled in appraising historical buildings. A Although the issue of condominium conversion did not lie before the council Monday, Mayor Nassif suggested a build ing code for condominiums to regulate further conversions. The code, to be finished by early November, should sup plement the town's building code. With an 8-1 vote, the council approved the site plan and preliminary sketch of Timberlyne Office Park South off of Weaver Dairy Road. Timberlyne Asso ciates is developing two office buildings, an apartment complex and a shopping center. " - Jennings said Tuesday that the entire Timberlyne project had been approved by the council under the old zoning or dinance. "The special use permits are no longer needed with the new ordinance (passed last spring) because the area is zoned for both commercial and residential uses," he said. The council originally proposed to re quire Timberlyne Associates to widen the entire stretch of Weaver Dairy Road ad jacent to the development, but lessened the requirement Monday night to the area along the property line of Timberlyne Of fice Park South (about 1000 feet). Disbursement Date: August 20-21 :AugusL24 August 25 August 26 August 27 August 28 September 4 September 11 September 18 September 25 October 2 COR SALE: REMINGTON LONG-CARRIAGE TYPEWRITER; manual. Good condition. Call Debbie at 933-6201. Please keep trying. FOR SALE: DORM SIZE REFRIGERATOR. 6 cubic feet $45 - Call 968-0103. 1974 PONTIAC GOOD CONDITION. Leaving country and must sell $750. 967-8460 after 6 pm. services SELL AND SWAP -a little bit of everything! Special - Ladies gym shorts, size 26 - 40. white coats, plus a surprise boxfl! All for $7.50, Furniture, beds, books, odds and ends for the apartment or room, ping pong tables, pictures, records, bean bags, town maps, nurse uniforms, free desk organizors, dog houses and play houses, pumpkins, skis and boots, ice skates, skate boards, tennis rackets, leopard skins, bicyle racks available for those who want to ride out - only 3 miles" from campus! MINI MOVING SERVICE - FAST, Friendly, dependable, economical. Call 942-2811 before 6 pm; Call 929-3809 after 6 pm. FLY TO THE BEACH or home any weekend. Pilot desires passengers to share reasonable expenses. Call 929-7489. wanted I NEED 4 NON-STUDENT TTX. to any home football game and am willing to make attractive offer. Call 379-8579 collect. Art. WANTED: NEED 2 S-5 or better. Will pay top dollar for each possible trade. Call 963-9409 anytime. Please keep trying. We're desperate! WANTED MUSICIANS TO PLAY WITH GROUP. Strictly for fun. Need fiddle, banjo, guitar, bass, mandolin. Want to play country and bluegrass. Just amateurs: Call 933-0831. for rent PARKING SPACES FOR RENT - close to campus. CaB 942-4053. roomatcs CAROLINA APTS. MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED TO share apt. with senior and Pharmacist. Rent $96 a month phis Vj utilities. Starts September. CaB Dave 967-8549. nununsmmnmmn3Winmnmmmmnnmm Cameras banned in Atlanta trial ATLANTA (AP) Cameras will be banned from the courtroom during Wayne B. Williams trial on charges of murdering two1 young blacks, the pre siding judge in the case ruled Tuesday. The decision by Superior Court Judge Clarence Cooper came on a motion by the Atlanta Press Club to allow four television cameras and four newspaper photographers in the courtroom when Williams is tried in the slayings begin ning Oct. 5.. In a written opinion, Cooper cited Georgia Supreme Court guidelines re quiring the consent of the defense, prosecutors and the presiding judge before cameras can be allowed in a courtroom during a trial. ' Williams is charged with murder in the asphyxiation deaths of Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, and Nathaniel Carter, 27, two of 28 young blacks whose deaths over the past two years have cast a pall of fear over the city. Airborne MX may be scrapped SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) President Ronald Reagan has all but ruled out an airborne system for the MX missile, a White House spokesman said Monday, but there are increasing signs that he is leaning toward a land based plan. Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes told reporters Monday Reagan had made preliminary decisions on both the MX and on a new manned bomber. "The president certainly has made some tentative decisions," Speakes said. "He knows what direction he wants to go on this. He has not made any final decisions.' . He said he could not confirm that Reagan is moving toward a land-based system for the MX, but said he would not dispute a statement by Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, that an airborne MX no longer was under serious consideration. If Reagan chooses a land-based system for hiding 200 missiles among 4,600 shelters in Nevada and Utah, as recommended by the Carter administration, he would be reversing a position he held during the 1980 presidential campaign. . 1 Bus stikes staged in Poland WARSAW, Poland (AP) Drivers in the industrial city of Radom halted their buses for an hour-long protest Tuesday, and Solidarity leaders demanded control over television coverage of the union's first congress next month. Solidarity officials in Radom, 60 miles south of Warsaw, declared their one hour strike a success and warned of more strikes on Friday unless the govern ment participated in talks. The drivers maintain that grievances from 1976 food riots have not been settled. Some of the drivers of about 130 buses sported red and white armbands and adorned their vehicles with Polish flags during the afternoon rush-hour shut down. About 10 drivers continued running their routes, officials said. Solidarity is to begin negotiating with government officials later this week on gaining direct access, to the state-run television, radio and newspapers. The union staged a two-day strike last week to push its demands for increased access to media to counter government comments, and virtually silenced the Com munist press. KIRKPATRICK'S BAR Welcomes All Students Back To Chapel Hill! Pinball Electronic Games v : Horseshoe Toorrja 108 W. Rosemary St. --'...9689347 For the real beer lover. THE STROH BREWERY COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN 1 977 Classified ads may be placed at the DTH Offices or mailed to the DTH Carolina Union 065A, Chapel Hill, NC 27514. All ads must be prepaid. Deadline: Ad must be received by 12 (noon) one business day before publication. ROOMMATE NEEDED TO SHARE 3 BEDROOM apartment in Bolinwood. On bus route. $130 plus s utilities per month. Call 929-4436. NEED TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES TO SHARE a furnished Tar Heel Manor Apartment. Rent $100.00 each and Vs utilities. Available immediately. CaB 967-4253. . ' - .' ROOMMATE WANTED TO SHARE Royal Park Apt. Prefer quiet,' studious male. On bus route, AC, pool, laundry, etc. Call Chris at 967-5037 anytime. Keep trying. MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for Old Well Apt, Serious student ONLY. Call Bill Murphy 962-7572 at day. 967-6240 at night. NO BOTHER WITH CAMPUS PARKING OR BUS! Female (undergrad preferably) to share apartment on E. Franklin Street near Morehead Planetarium. Excellent locale! Interested' in responsible mature-fun-roommate. Please , call 929-8013 or 933-6533. miscellaneous I AM WILLING TO TRADE my S-4 permit for your N-4 or S-5. Can Jill 942-4369. Leave message. Keep trying! S-5 PARKING STICKER TO TRADE FOR N-4 parking sticker.' Lefs help each other out. Call Karin 933-9766 (home) or 966-5082 (leave message). Keep trying!! PLEASE TRADE YOUR N-4 PARKING sticker for my S-5 sticker. It would make my life a lot easier! Thank you! Pete 929-2787. Keep trying! WANT TO TRADE AN S-5 parking sticker for an N-4. If you have an N-4 you want to trade, call Susan at 962-0245. DOWNTOWN PARKING SPACES FOR RENT-PARK and walk to campus. $22.50 per month CaH 929-6577 FREE ROOM IN RETURN FOR babysitting and light housekeeping. 6 miles north in the county. Need own car 967-4528. TOM ROBINSON'S SEAFOOD AND PRODUCE. Seafood Thurs-Sat. Produce M on-Sat, 300 W. Rosemary behind Chutney, l't blocks from campus. Customer parking 10 off all produce and eggs 9-noon Saturdays. We feature the area's freshest seafood and local produce. 942-1221. want to buy WILL BUY NEW AND USED LP's (Rock, Classical, Jazz. Blues, Wave, etc.) and ENTIRE COLLECTIONS. Also cassettes, 8-tracks. Good prices 929-6175 keep trying. 8 a.m.-12, after 5. ' personals FREE COPY! Your right to know by Darwin Gross. ; Subjects ranging from the spiritual body of man to - abortion, science, the sun, and the awakening of ' one's consciousness. Write: ECKANKAR Center, . P.O. Box 4125, Chapel Hifl 27514. CALL WXYC REQUEST LINE 962-8989 to hear Brand New Love Affair, Sooner or Later, Lone ,1 Survivor and other great tunes from Brice Street's , debut album. BRICE STREET BAND eays -Welcome back Carolina students. Go Heels!" Check out our debut album. Rise Up in The Night, sale-priced at Record Bar. DEAR PRINCE. HAPPY "28TH BIRTHDAY. "You are more than a number In my little red book!" Thanks for the time together. Love and ' kisses. Princess. SARAH. SORRY THIS IS LATE. BUT welcome to Carolina! So glad that you are here now. I Love You. Mike. JOAN (J.D.E.) "The most beautiful girl in the world" (in ed. 41 - 2nd S.S.) - Td like to get together with you for anything (dinner, movie, jogging . . .) Can't we? David P. 553-7877 (collect), or respond in paper. DEAR THOMAS' REAL MOTHER. HAPPY LABOR Day. We hope you will be in Chapel HiU for a visit "soon." Thomas fat working hard and, you 11 be glad to know, getting some sleep. We saw him asleep in the library just this morning. He says hello. Love, the well -developed minds. KAREN B.. CaU me Call me Call me Call me Can me Caa me Can me CaU me CaH me CaU me CaU me 933-2822. Richard H. COMh ONE. COME ALU Trish's 18th. 7th at H.J Be there. Aloha! si

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