Granberry, Hall appointed editors
of Yackety Yack,' 'Cellar Door'
Wednesday, February 16, 1933The Daily Tar Heet3
By STUART TONWNSQN
Staff Writer
Lisa Granberry was named editor-in-chief of
the 1984 Yackety Yack, and Tamara Hall was
selected editor of the Cellar Door for the
1983-1984 school year by the Media Board
Monday night,1 1
t
The Yack, the UNC yearbook, is scheduled
to come out in November 1984. The Cellar
Door, the campus literary magazine, comes out
twice a year.
Hall, a junior English major, said she
planned to use publicity to make the Cellar
Door a better magazine. "It is all right for a
literary publication to keep a low profile, but in
creased publicity and visibility will help thr
magazine become a better production," she
said.
Increased publicity will allow the Cellar Door
to recruit more competent critics, get better sub
missions, sell more copies and improve advertis
ing sales, Hall said.
"I would doubt that the lack of contributions
is attributable to a lack of interest on the part of
the students," she said. There are people who
write, and these students must be contacted, she
said.
Hall served as prose editor of the Cellar Door
last year.
The main objective of the 1983-1984 Yackety
Yack staff should be to get the yearbook out on
time, said Granberry, a sophomore business ad
ministration major. "(But) I can understand
how there might be unforeseen problems which
hold things up," she added.
This year's yearbook was supposed to come
out in November. Instead, she said, it would be
coming out in late March.
Student interest als is a problem the Yack
must address, Granberry said. "I know that the
Yack has won awards, but I don't think
students are as pleased with it as they could be,"
she said. The yearbook should be for the
students and not the critics, she said.
Plans for the 1984 annual include starting
work this summer, including the entire staff in
the layout process, increasing the size of the
staff and getting pictures in earlier, Granberry
said.
Granberry served as managing editor for the
1983 Yackety Yack.
Jaywalking
Drivers complain about illegal crossings
By MARK ANCONA
: Staff Writer
The Chapel Hill Police Department has increased safe
ty patrols at crosswalks after receiving complaints recently
from local motorists about pedestrians walking into traf
fic after leaving public buses, said Chief Herman Stone of
the Chapel Hill Police Department.
Stone said police have received most of their com
plaints about the intersection at U.S. 15-501 and the
Hotel Europa entrance.
"Any time pedestrians go across this road it is very
dangerous," Stone said. "If it becomes necessary, we will
approach this problem by issuing more jaywalking tickets
in this area in order to protect the pedestrian.
"We had to enforce jaywalking laws at the NCNB
crosswalk and at the crosswalk at Fraternity Court due to
potential dangers," he said.
There have been no major problems with accidents be
tween pedestrians and vehicles, but there have been
enough of them to emphasize safety procedures, Stone
said. x
There was one accident in which a pedestrian left the
bus, crossed in front of it and walked into the traffic
without looking, said Capt. N.E. Miller of the Carrboro
Police Department. The accident occurred in front of the
. Orange Water and Sewer Authority in Carrboro.
"We must warn the pedestrians as well as the
motorists," Stone said. "We would like people to comply
with the laws and to use crosswalks at all times. If every
pedestrian did this, it would ease the problem considerably.'
RHA 'to decide on enhancement fund options
To tho t : ' t;-; Thinks fcr an a.vcsom'c!y p'cccr.t
. - - J.L.H., ?w3 ncl-qi
By EVAN TRULOVE
Staff Writer
Officials of the Residence Hall Association have to decide be
tween two options concerning the distribution of enhancement
funds among the dormitories.
One option divides the remaining $16,000 in enhancement
funds among the dormitories, taking into account that some
residence areas have already spent money from their budget, ac
cording to University housing officials. The other option divides
the remaining money among the residence halls on a percentage
basis, depending on the number of residents living in the dormi
tory. The two options were presented by Jody Harpster, acting
director of University housing, and Carolyn JElfland. University
housing associate director, at the RHA meeting on Monday, RHA
officials are meeting with their executive councils during the next
two weeks to decide which option to advocate.
RHA President Scott Templeton said he favored distributing
funds to residence halls based on the amount which each area has
already spent.
"If you look across campus at the nine residence halls and two
independent halls, it is fairer to let the areas that have not had ex
penditures spend where they want to spend," he said.
Enhancement money, which is usedio improve dormitories, is
divided into three categories: equipment, repairs and supplies.
Each dormitory president or governor receives $2 from each resi
dent's room rent to spend on enhancement each semester.
The decision of the enhancement fund distribution is following
a depletion of the new equipment portiDn of the fund. The deple
tion resulted from a' misunderstanding between students and
University housing on exactly how the funds were allocated to the
dorms.
RHA officials had thought the enhancement money was taken
from a bulk fund, Templeton said, when he learned of the deficit
, three weeks ago. Actually, the funds are distributed directly into
individual accounts for each dormitory, Elfland said.
Harpster attributed the deficit to residence halls' purchases of
three stereo systems, 18 to 20 microwave ovens and new furniture
last semester. Last semester's ban on cooking in dormitory rooms
, caused the University housing's budget estimate to be too low for
new equipment purchases, Harpster said.
"We are dependent on you to tell us how you want the funds
divided," Elfland told RHA officials at Monday meeting. "The
students should be able to figure out what their needs are better
than we can sitting in Carr Building."
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