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2The Daily Tar HeelMonday, February 22.
Stadium to have
greater capacity
Construction is underway at Boshamer
Stadium to increase the seating capacity
for baseball games.
Actually, no seats are being built, said
Gordon H. Rutherford, Director of Plan
ning. The construction will clear and
fence in the grassy area between the
stadium and the dorms to provide seating
on the grass, Rutherford said. The em
bankment will be leveled into natural
tiers.
"The Building and Grounds Commit
tee didn't approve of constructing seats,
so students will sit on the grassy embank
ment and watch the game," he said.
The construction should be completed
before the baseball season begins this spr
ine. Rutherford said.
The construction will cost about
$45000 to $50,000, said Paul Hoolahan,
Athletic Fitness director.
Boshamer Stadium was completed
around 1972, and currently has a seating
capacity of 2,500.
BY LIZ LUCAS
Gunman robs
deliveryman
A Domino's Pizza delivery man was
robbed at gunpoint of $8 in cash and $100
in personal property, last Thursday even
ing. The incident occurred about 10:15
p.m. outside a residence at 332 McMaster
St. John Kendrick, a UNC graduate stu
dent and employee of Domino's, was met
by two black males who forced him at
gunpoint to hand over all of his cash.
Kendrick said he only had about $8 in
cash and that the assailant then forced
him to open the trunk of his car from
which they removed his tool box.
Kendrick said he was instructed by the
robbers to get in his car and drive away or
they would shoot him. Kendrick drove
directly to Domino's where he phoned
police.
A spokesman for Domino's said two
suspects were apprehended in connection
with the robbery, although no charges
have been filed yet.
JOHN CONWAY
u u
Luncheon Specials
available at lunch
11 to 2 p.m. M-F
i ill i
Pizza buffet
$2.95
$1.95
$2.95
$1.95
$1.95
Spaghetti
Lasagna .
Salad bar . .
Great Potato
I
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200
Open Mon.Thurs. 11 a.m.-midnite,
Fru & Sat. - a.m. , Sun 4-11
PRESENT TIIIS AD FOR
2 FOR 1 PIZZA SPECIAL!
W. FRANKLIN ST.
now available
Carolina Union AciiviSies Board
Public Relations,
Publicity
Social
Recreation
gallery ;
Performing Arts
College Bowl -Videotape
at tho Information Desk
Doadlino Frl.V Feb. 26 5 pm
Sign up for an interview when you return application
o
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: 23 words or less
Students $2.00
Non-students $3.00
5C for 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.
announcements
ALL APPLICANTS FOR 1982-83 Chairperson of
the Union Activities Board are Invited to an Open
House Wednesday. Feb. 24 in Room 200 of the
Union. This year's Chairpersons will be available to
answer any questions you have.
HEAR AMBASSADOR ROBERT NEUMANN
discuss "Policy and Tactical Alternatives In
U.S.Arabian Peninsula Relations", Tuesday,
4:00 in Gerrard Hall. Sponsored by Curriculum
in Peace, War, and Defense.
NOMINATE A PROFESSOR for a DISTIN
GUISHED TEACHING AWARD! BaSots at Union.
Libraries, Y-Court, and around campus through
March 5.
ml
1982
;S !j S I! H ii . 'I n it . " iri . j
v m ,..t I, " 1 1 1 11 t
- tL. .
i -J' - ' -TcjC "4.
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A bulldozer terraces the ground at Boshamer Stadium
... to create more seating area at baseball games
growth
A California developer and UNC graduate
has plans to develop Hickory Hills retirement
center, and has publicized the center in the na
tionwide market, said Chapel Hill Planning
Director Mike Jennings.
At least one additional retirement complex
is in the developing stages at present, said
Vicki Spinney of the Chapel Hill Chamber of
Commerce. Brightwood Terrace, on U.S. 54,
will be a six-story complex that will include
medical facilities and a physical therapy pro
gram. Spinney said the Chamber of Commerce re
ceives over 1,000 inquires a year from retired
persons interested in moving to Chapel Hill.
"Many (of the prospects) are from Florida
who first retired there but don't like the heat
and are looking to move a little farther north,"
she said.
One area developer, Ron Wells of the Wells
Management Group in Chapel Hill, said it
would take a flurry of construction similar to
that of the early 1970s to meet these popula
tion increases. The housing boom of that time
was sparked by the sudden growth of the RTP
and the University's announcement tht it
would stop building student housing. As a re
sult, 3,500 apartments and condominiums
were added to the area during the 1970s, while
1,302 new single-family houses were built be
tween 1971 and 1973.
Wells said their company would only build
for specific markets in the future.
American Cancer
Society
r
3 Nightly Specials
Monday Lasagna &
all the salad you can eat
only $2.95
Tuesday all the pizza &
salad you can eat
; only $2.95
Wednesdayall the. ,
spaghetti & salad you can
eat only $2.75
pm
942-5149 . J
Forum
; I Special Projects
," Film
Human Relations
r?o T1 TT
HEAR JAMES FALLOWS DISCUSS -Current
Trends in National Defense Planning".
Thursday, February 25, at 8:00 p.m., 100
Hamilton Hall. Sponsored by Curriculum in
Peace, War; and Defense.
HUMAN SEXUALITY INFORMATION AND
Counseling Service offers counseling and referrals
on contraception, relationships, pregnancy,
homosexuality, and venereal disease. Call 962-5505
or visit suite B. Union
lost Ci found
LOST: GOLD SIGNET RING. If found please call
Angela at 967-7290 or 968-4456. Reward.
FOUND LADIES GOLD WATCH in front of Dey
Hafl 217. CaU 933-7246 to identify.
SUBSTANTIAL REWARD! Any information on
missing Artley silver open -hole FLUTE no questions
asked. Cafl 933-4719.
help wanted
OVERSEAS JOBS-SUMMERYEAR round.
Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All Fields.
$500-51200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info. Write
IJC Box 52-NC-l Corona Del Mar, CA 92625.
SUMMER CAMP COUNSELOR POSITIONS
available at one of the nation's finest resident camps
for men and women with three years of college.
Openings for specialists in all land and water sports,
arts & crafts, dance, music, drama, and other skills
as well as for general counselors. For information
contact John Has.nas at 1-383-4507.
. . V..
DTHAI Steele
"We are gearing our construction to the
market of the young professional and the
young married and unmarried couples. We
have employed the 'smaller, smarter concept,
primarily building townhouses to save on land
space," he said.
Wells said his company would also construct
housing designed for the retired market.
"Developers will soon be building 'cluster
housing' (apartments and townhouses); they
will be the wave of the future," Robbins said,
Robbins believes single-family homes are on
the way out in favor of the smaller units.
"Housing will consist of smaller homes, and
even when the custom homes are built, they
will be more compact," he said.
"I don't think we'll see 3,000-square-foot
houses being built in the future. Neither will
the houses that are built have as many frills as
in the past," Robbins said.
"I think we'll see small property single
family types of housing such as duplexes,
garden apartments and townhouses," Jennings
said. "Once the interest rates come down,
we'll see much more demand for housing de
velopment, because these high-interest rates
have created a lot of pent-up development."
Jennings said the town had been promoting
growth by passing new zoning ordinances that
would encourage future residential develop
ment. Low-income families may also find it harder
to. obtain public housing in the future, said
Alvin Stevenson, executive director of the
Chapel Hill Housing Authority. Since 1967,
the authority has been responsible for locating
low-cost housing for 230 families, and pres
ently is constructing 82 additional units. But
Stevenson said those may be the last public
units built in the area.
"New funding (from the federal govern
ment) for public housing will be non-existent
after 1983, so the new rental housing market
will be severely tightened," he said. "In es
sence, what exists in 1983 will be all that's
available.
You know PTA delivers great
hot pizza. But did you know that
with every pizza PTA delivers cold
Cokes too? Free 1 4-ouncers.
It's the Meal Deal
Savings for real.
When it comes topizza,
pta comes to you.
i " n i i
FREE DELIVERY ANYWHERE IN OUR SERVICE ZONE
Classified ads may be placed at the DTH Offices or mailed
to the DTH Carolina Union 065A, Chapel Hill, NC 27514.
ASTHMATICS-EARN $150 in a 20-25 hour
breathing experiment at the EPA facility on the
UNC-CH campus. Volunteers must be male, age
18-35, with a current or previous history of asthma.
If interested, please call 966-1253. Monday-Friday,
8 am-5 pm.
for sale
PARKER DORM CONTRACT FOR Sale (female).
Available immediately. Great location close to
Union and classes. Call 967-5159 evenings.
services
MR. ICS MUSIC SHOW features a disc jockey
playing rock, funk, oldies, beach, tnd your requests
for any size party; Call 942-5293. $100four hours.
DANCE AESOBIC CLASSES FBEE intro
ductory dasa March 2 Marsha Wfawtead
instructor T-TTI 8-9 pas. Only Spring
loaded floor exercise area la Chapel HZL
Where? Carolina Sport Art next to RR
track. Iloatestaad Rd, Chapel IlilL
929-7877 or 942-4620.
GET ACQUAINTED WITH SOMEONE new.
Carolina Computer Dating. Send for informatin 108
West Franklin Street, Chapel Hill, NC 27514.
CARICATURES, CARICATURES.
CARICATURES, CARICATURES.
Personalized greeting cards, cartooning and
other quality artwork, too. Am also available for
parties. Call David Washburn. 967-2521.
Students should apply now
.Reidiice tall joh
Applications are now available for five to eight assistant area
director positions for campus residence halls, along with one
assistant tower manager positon for Granville Towers. Applica
tions may be picked up in Carr Building, area director offices or
Granville Towers desks.
. Applicants must be students prepared to work both semesters
next year with no other employment commitments. Although
graduate and professional students are preferred, up
perclassmen with good grades and experience in residence hall
work may also apply, said Jody Harpster, associate director for
residence life.
AADs will share responsibility with their area director for the
management and supervision of their residence area, he said.
"Private enterprise hasn't shown the incen
tive in the past to build public housing so I
doubt they would in the future either," he
said.
The end result of the program may be that
low-income families will be forced to enter the
competitive public market against higher
income buyers, Stevenson said.
The population increases will also cause pro
blems for local planners working to meet the
town's transportation needs.
During the last 10 years, there has been an
annual 2 percent increase in traffic in Chapel
Hill, said Danny Pleasants of the Chapel Hill
Planning Department.
" We expect an average of 220,100 'person
trips' (significant individual movements be
tween two points by driving, bike riding or
walking) a day this year," he said. "For the
year 2000 we have projected 350,812 person
trips per day."
A current example of the population in
crease causing congestion problems is the
Highway 1S-S01 Bypass, Pleasants said. The
bypass was orginaUy designed to accommodate
7,000 to 8,000 vehicle trips per day, but the
number of daily trips averages over 30,000.
Pleasants said the intersection of Weaver
and Main streets in Carrboro and the Carolina
Inn section of Columbia Street were two sec
tions that had also outgrown their capacities
and will require correction as time continues.
But the traffic situation may not improve in
the future, he said. "There is no relief for this
situation in the next 10 years in the state's
Highway Improvements Plan released re
cently," he said. "The only major improve
ments for the 1980s are the 1-40 project in .
Orange County and the widening of (High
way) 54 to Raleigh and the section of South
. Columbia Street that runs behind Memorial
Hospital.
"That could all change," he said. "They've
Pizza
Transit
Authority
EMERGENCY TYPING SERVICE. Paper due
tomorrow? Call us today! In by 9 out by 5. $2 per
page. Call 942-1067 anytime.
SKYBUS -"NO FRILLS" Student teacher
flights Europe, Israel, Asia, Mideast, Africa Global
StudentTeacher Travel Service, 521 Fifth Avenue,
New York, N.Y. 10017 212-379-3532 or 212-883-0111.
for rent
BEST DEAL IN TOWN. Now accepting
applications for Fall housing. Sign up now before
the rates go up! Green belt Apartments 929-3821.
FOR RENT: TWO BEDROOM Kingswood Apt.
Partially furnished, free all route bus passes
Included.- Available immediately call: 9684327
NOW!
SUBLET: ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT March
10-July 17. Swimming pool, laundry facilities.
Transfer of security deposit negotiable. Call
942-1617. Keep trying.
- miscellaneous
UNC SUNBATHERS! We stiH have space on your
SPRING BREAK Trip to Ft. Lauderdaie-$129.00
7 nights 8 days tennis parties and much
more! For more information (800) 368-2006 TOLL
FRED SPACE IS LIMITED.
SPECIAL IIITS NOT KESE offer Happy
HosuT prices on Beer every Moawlay frosa 5
pm nn til dosing.
BEAT THE WINTER BLAHS! Colorkd. snuggly
hats, muSers, mittens, shawls, sweaters, slipper
socks, quilts, etc. for the entire family. Womancraft
Cooperative, 412 West Franklin Street.
WW
They will be paid $4.15 an hour and will work about 26 hours
a week. They will also be required .to live in an apartment in
their dormitory and pay rent.
The ATM supervises the resident assistant. The position in
cludes free room and board and a weekly $60 stipend.
Applications from students presently enrolled at UNC must
be turned in by March 1 . The deadline for students not presently
enrolled is April 2.
Final selections for the positions will be made by May 11,
Harpster said.
BY KIM WOOD
(state planners) always evaluated us in July
which obviously doesn't give us a fair break
since fewer students are in town. But we asked
the state for a re-evaluation and they have con
sented to come back in October (of this year)."
Jennings said he didn't believe the state
would fund projects such as the widening of
roads, so the town planned to emphasize other
mvi"'" rf travel C,nntrvr5' n - c5Hi-
Government
policy on development
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON Interior
Secretary James Watt, in what ap
peared to be a major policy reversal,
said Sunday that the Reagan ad
ministration wants a moratorium on
drilling and mining in wilderness areas
until the end of the century.
Catching conservationists off
guard, Watt said the administration
would propose legislation this week to
amend the 1964 Wilderness Act to
protect the 80 million acres of land
from developers until the year 2000.
Under the present law, the land
would be permanently off limits for
exploration and development after
Dec. 31, 1983. But Watt said the na
tion's "vulnerability to a natural
resources attack or war" requires a
new look in 2000.
Watt previously had advocated let
ting the Interior Department issue
leases for wilderness exploration and
development through the year 2003, a
position that environmentalists and
others had opposed.
"It's a real victory for wilderness
preservation,"' said- Bill Turnage,; ex
ecutive director of the Wilderness
Society, a group that had sought
Watt's resignation. "This is a com
plete turnaround in the administra
tion's policy."
Watt, speaking on NBC's "Meet
the Press" program, said the legisla
tion will include a provision that
would allow a president, with the con
sent of Congress, to withdraw
whatever acreage might be needed to
American Ballet Theatre II
Sat., Feb. 27
8:00 pm
Memorial Hall
Tickets $5.50 & $7.50
Pi?"
All ads must be prepaid. Deadline: Ad must be received by
.12 (noon) one business day before publication. .,
rides
RIDE NEEDED TOFROM Louisville, Kentucky or
nearby over Spring Break. Call Jay 933-4015.
NEED RIDE TO TAMPAST. PETE Owtr area for
Spring Break! Will share expenses and driving. Call
Dawn at 933-2806 after 6 pm, or leave message.
personals
MOUNTAIN MEMORIES SOMETHING TO look
forward to. . .and to look back on. SKI NEARBY.
$40 for 2 people, S45 for 4 nhely. Build memories at
Mountain Brook Cottages, US 441 S., Sytva, N.C
704-5864329.
GMD: BORN 8301766. Only 30 more days until
Diddybonk Day. Come Join in the celebration of the
216th anniversary of die death of America's first
great linguist and teen idoL so brutally murdered on
that cold and windy March day near Boone, NC, all
those years ago. Call 933-6045. Ask for Dink or
Tony. "Beware die Ides of Diddybonk. Listen up
good and fH sink you a sonk, "bout dat wonderful
man. Gerald M. Diddybonk.
BURGESS. STEALING SILVERWARE FROM the
Sigma Chi Kitchen with your letters on that sucks!
Three innocent bystanders.
TO THE ENGLISH MAJOR who praised my "Great
Talent" Thursday, Let me return the compliment:
You're wtity, perceptive and very pretty too! Will I
see you again? Music Lover.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY JAMAICAN HANEY! Wanna
drink to all the good times? You can. pick your gift
up at Troll's: Look for the Mercedes with Jimmy
BuSet, Magnum and Dr. Snipes in it. What fun they
wQ be in the sauna! Love, The future Foxcroft
Haney's
available
From page 1
walks and bikeways, and increased bus and
ride-sharing services will be used to help alle
viate future problems, he said.
TUesday: A look at the interaction between
Chapel Hill and the University in terms of the
town's future growth.
reverses
meet "a national need" for oil,
natural gas, strategic minerals or
timber.
"We would be asking... that the
secretary of the interior report every
five years to the Congress on the
values within the wilderness that might
be available to the American people if
an urgent national need' did arise," he
said.
Watt said the United States last year
imported about 40 percent of its
energy from abroad and is dependent
on the Soviet Union and southern
African nations for chromium,
platinum and other strategic minerals
vital to the nation's defense.
"Right now," he said, "the United
States is vulnerable to a natural
resources attack or war."
But, he said a "national need"
allowing exploration and development
of wilderness lands under a partial lif
ting of the moratorium also might in
clude heating homes if there is a fuel
shortage due to another Arab oil em
bargo. Watt said the 80 million acres now
designated wilderness areas have never
' been inventoried properly and' he
woul like to see the U.SGeolojgical
Survey increase its surveying on them.
He said another 20 million acres
under consideration for designation
by Congress as wilderness also would
be covered by the moratorium. If
Congress does not designate portions
of that land as wilderness after the In
terior Department makes a recom
mendation, it will be opened to leas
ing, he said.
SOFIA
PKiLNAPJ.lOniC ;
QHCHiSTOA
of Bulgaria
Konstantin llirev
Yordan Dafov
Conductors
Sun., Feb. 23 0:00 p.m.
r.!smorlcl Hell
Tickets $2.60 Union Box Office
INTRODUCTION TO SELF STUDY Gurdjlefl
Method. Presented by Thomas T. Grey, MA Call
Raleigh: 821-1270 for time and location.
YES! WE DO DELIVER perosonafly decorated
cookie cakes for aO occasions to UNCI Yes we do
have a "cookie muncher" who sings happy birthday
and other special occasion songs! For this unique
gift, call the Cookie Factory at Northgate 286-2628.
CUTE LITTLE CHICK-THANKS for being special
and making my vacation so great. Even Boston will
seem warmer now, though there's someone
missing. I'm looking forward to our second date,
your creature.
TO ONE OF THE two tafl, blond brothers kt P.E. 88
MWF 10:00. Want to practice mouth-to-mouth? A
victim.
WELUAM, SAW YOU AT Pvrdy Friday
signs. Is this a rcgaler occurrence? If o
perhaps sreH saeet soon; Interested.
TOTALLY INTRIGUED: I CHOKED bigtime! A
roadtrip had been planned for the weekend! How
about another rendezvous tonight? same
place. . .same time. . .TOTALLY IMPRESSED.
MAN ON FOUR CAN I touch you? or are you out of
touch? Do you like "cancer" types? Here's to many
more good times at Purdys 1 need you so. CandyO
The Dangerous type.
GEORGE, THANKS SO MUCH for the candy!
That was sweet of you. Now, when do I get the
daiqubies? Joy.