Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 29, 1983, edition 1 / Page 5
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Monday, August 29, 1983The Daily Tar Heel5A Construction changes face of community Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale at or below the advertised price in each A&P Store, except as specifically noted in this ad. PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, SEPT. 3 AT A&P IN CHAPEL HILL AND CARRBORO. ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS. (minium ilium i iiiiiiniiiii jiiuiiW..J.u..,ww.,Miow.B,vvww.wi wwnyiMim""" mmttma'vwmmimiiimtmnmHi9mmimmHm .OT.ty; w iihmm j" ' '"""iiit "NnL ,mttfi"a'S'1' WO8tJi0J t I Ik f 111 11 i;;J?liWff : - a f f I 1 I 1 1 I, I II II 1 .fejffiS- --rzzZxZ ( V S If II I J r I - f I By GINNY FRENCH Staff Writer Students returning to the Chapel Hill area will notice several new development projects begun during the summer. In the center of town, on East Franklin Street, the area formerly occupied by the Golden Dragon restaurant has become a mini-mall. A new Golden Dragon will be in the mall, along with six other tenants Subway sandwich shop, Tripodi's Delicatessen, the Johnny T-Shirt Shop, Fotomat, Copy Quick and an eye care center. The Chapel Hill contracting firm Bar ret, Robert and Woods undertook the $75,000 project in May. The firm hopes to complete the project in October. Further west on Franklin Street, Boddie-Noell Enterprises of Rocky Mount has made room for a new Hardee's fast food restaurant. The old Hardee's came down in May, and the new one is sche duled to open soon in the same location. The project cost about $300,000, and the new restaurant is designed to better ac commodate Hardee's business needs. Another new restaurant has opened in Chapel Hill Sonny's Real Pit Barbecue, on U.S. Highway 15-501 By-pass. Sonny's, a $250,000 project, was built by D t - ' - ' : BACK LIVM N:V ' ' -mi-- ITW STUDENTS I WE 0 - FOR EVERY $10.03 YOU SPEK3, WE WILL C3USLE 5 MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS, EXAMPLE: $13 PURCHASE 5 COUPONS, $20 PURCHASE 10 CCUP0KS, $1C3 PURCHASE 53 CCUPCXS. ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE! Btwn now and Sapt. 3. w will rdm national manufacturar't eanta-oft coupon up to SO for doubta tnak valua. Otfar good on national manu-. tacturafa' oanta-off coupons only. (Food ratallar coupona not accaptad.) Cuatomar muat purchaaa coupon product In apaclflad alza. Explrad coupona wW not ba honorad. Ona coupon par cuatomar par Ham. No coupona accaptad for traa marchandlaa. Offar doaa not apply to A&P or othar atora coupona whathai manutacturar la mantlonad or not Whan tha vakia of ttta coupon axcaada SO or tha ratall of tha Ham. thia otfar la limit ad to tha ratall prica. Savings art Great with MP's povhi sj&ix&s coupons'. HFC'S MFC AAFAOOCO TOTAL COUPON COUFOM -CUTS OFF" 'CENTS OFF' W F COUPON A 25' 25' 50 COUPON B 18' 18' 36' COUPON C 50 50 81.00 COUPON D 75' I 25' $1.00 THJeff Neuville This newly built Hardee's is just one of the changes made in Chapel Hill over the summer. Other new sites include a new minimall on Franklin Street, restaurants and fraternity and sorority houses. Charlotte contractors Butler and Sidbury. Closer to the University, a fraternity house is under construction, while a new sorority house opened recently. Both pro jects were handled by Security Building Company of Chapel Hill. The Sigma Phi Epsilon house, at Cameron Avenue and Pittsboro Street, is scheduled for completion by Sept. 24. The three-story colonial residence will house 41 people. And sisters of Zeta Tau Alpha moved into their new sorority house Tuesday at 120 North Street. In several areas around Chapel Hill, new shopping centers will soon be spring ing up. The Timberline Shopping Center on Kingston Drive is currently under con struction. The center will include a Food Lion supermarket, Kerr Drugs and eight small shops with space for fast food restaurants. And on the N.C. 54 By-pass, a new shopping center currently in the beginning stages of construction will include a super market, drug store and several shops. With most students gone, city life went on From staff reports MAY Police arrested four people on charges of sell ing cocaine following a four-month investigation by local authorities. Police seized 8.2 pounds of cocaine valued at $75,000. A Chapel Hill police detective was arrested and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol. Chief Herman Stone fired the detective, who subsequently filed an appeal. Orange County recorded the lowest jobless rate in the state in April with 3.2 percent of the work force unemployed. Chapel Hill attorney Kirk Osborn was appointed as the first public defender for Orange and Chatham Coun ties. Osborn' s term began June 1. After months of haggling over the Thoroughfare Plan, the Chapel Hill Planning Board accepted the pro posed road plan with the removal of the Parker Road ex tension. The plan now moves to the Town Council, which has postponed discussion until November. JUNE The Chapel Hill Town Council voted 5-4 to cut the mayor's salary from $10,000 annually to $7,000. Mayor Nassif , following the vote, said the salary cut was a personal attack by some council members. .. c , Both Chapel Hill and Orange County governments adopted budgets for the 1983-84 fiscal year that did not in clude tax hikes. Chapel Hill passed a $12.7 million budget and Orange County adopted a $20.9 million budget. Sonny's Real Pit Barbecue, U.S. 15-501 Bypass at Elliot Road, opened its doors for business in June. The opening was delayed because of special requirements plac ed on the restaurant by the town Planning Board. Rush-hour traffic clogged Main Street in Carrboro most of the month as the result of utility work by Southern Bell. The Carrboro Board of Aldermen granted a tem porary permit to the Chapel Hill Housing Authority for the construction of the Oakwood public housing project. Village Cable of Chapel Hill temporarily discon tined the Escapade adult entertainment network to local customers. Several residents have complained to town and cable officials about the channel, which is own ed and operated by Playboy magazine. JULY Durham Morning Herald reporter Al Wheless was arrested and charged with trespassing after he refused to leave an executive session of the Hillsborough Board of Commissioners. Wheless refused to leave the meeting because he said commissioners were violating the state's open meeting law by entering a closed session. Two Chapel Hill men were arrested and charged with the first-degree rape of a 14-year-old girl. The rape was not related to seven sexual assaults on local women in the past five months, police officials said. Three UNC students were arrested on drug distribu tion charges following an undercover operation by local law enforcement agencies, . ., ; s :i A 32-year-old Chapel Hill man was stabbed to death by three of his neighbors at a local mobile home park. The three men were charged with first degree murder, armed robbery and possession of stolen property. The murder reportedly occurred following a dispute between the neighbors and the victim, according to police authorities. The case of a Chapel Hill police detective, who was fired after he was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol in June, was postponed until Aug. 17. Although Orange County's unemployment rate jumped by one-half a percentage point in June, the coun ty continued to boast the lowest unemployment rate of all counties in the state, with 4.1 percent of the work force out of work. The N.C. State Motor Club recognized Chapel Hill for the second consecutive year for having no traffic fatalities. The lack of high-speed areas in the town contri butes to the unusually good safety record, police officials said. AUGUST The three men charged in the July 7 stab bing murder of their neighbor were indicted by an Orange County grand jury. A trial date is expected in October. The Orange County Commissioners, after several months of debate, finally approved the proposed Midway Airport, to be located in Bingham Township off N.C. 54. Construction on the private airport is scheduled to begin in September 1984. Action by local government on the proposed Thoroughfare Plan for Chapel Hill was postponed until November., The plan received conditional approval from the Planning Board in May, but because of a backlog of other issues, final consideration was delayed. Orange County could yield as much as $ 1 . 1 milion by the end of the current fiscal year if it implemented the recently approved one-half-cent local sales tax option. However, members of the local delegation are split on the issue. Cost of full-service bus passes gets increased by Town Council From staff reports The Chapel Hill Town Council voted in June, as part of its budget adoption pro cess, to raise the price of full-service bus passes. Adult fares for peak and off-peak hours remained the same. The cost of a 12-month adult pass jumped $22.50 under the new cost for mula, rising from $112.50 to $135. The most popular pass among students, the nine-month pass, will now cost $109.75, an increase of $17 over last semester. Six-month pass prices increased by $11.25, while three-month pass prices jumped $2.25. Fare prices will remain the same as last semester. During peak hours, 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m., adult fare is 50 cents. Off-peak fare is 40 cents for adults. Special tokens sold by the town for 50 cents each will be accepted as fare for one ride. Token prices will be discounted 15 percent for purchases of 40 or more tokens. CHAPEL HILL TRANSPORTATION COSTS ADOPTED JUNE FULL-SERVICE ADULT COSTS 12-month pass 9-month pass 6-month pass 3-month pass 40-ride ticket Adult fare: peakoff-peak YOUTH, SENIOR CITIZEN AND CAMPUS SHUTTLE COSTS 12-month pass 9-month pass 6-month pass 3-month pass 80-ride ticket Single fare: peakoff-peak 27, 1983 PRICE $135.00 $109.75 $ 78.75 $ 42.25 $ 17.00 $ .50.40 $ 67.50 $ 54.75 $ 39.50 $ 21.00 $ 17.00 $ .25.20 CADU CEU MEDICAL BOOKSTORE Serving The Health Sciences Campus (Olf iMfiHKtiill Ufiiitf ;hMH: ilfi itiilt serving the healing arts Preclinical Education Bldg. HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Closed Sat. c r ...JH....J.lWiMM " " li..ij.iLii.i.sar SAVE $1.41 LB. WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF QITlOOOH BONE IN lb. SFresh With QualitvX j"- "s. 0 t n i u U O SAVE 30 LB. SAVE 20 LB. Seedless Grapes Delicious Apples rRED OR WHITE kEASTERN GOLDEN miV IU to V . 7 U UiOJ .h rOl tin rOJrOj ecat Groce mxix bavinqs v mmiB pern (rfp-oaiirBitetOBp ( IIP ifiUIfe fliK,!S3 I ( 8 SAVE $1.10 Hot Dogs Sealtest c'eL ALLGOOD ALL FLAVORS yZb, (oWB 1f4 rToTB Now.. .Save A&P Gold Register Tapes for great savings on quality 1Qt. Open Saucepan (51(01 nil TI rTI With $200 Worth A&P Gold register tapes. 188 Stainless Steel with 3 layer tri-ply bottom for better cooking HERE'S HOW IT WORKS . . . Save your valuable A&P gold register tapes starting Sunday, August 28th. When you have the amount of A&P gold register tapes needed, redeem them at the A&P check stand. Naturally you can start saving more A&P gold register tapes for the next cookware item you plan to select. And remember, all items are on sale for the duration of this program. This offer is scheduled to end Sat., Dec. 17, 1983. COUNTRY KITCHENDELI SPECIALS Premium Baited Slam .b. Egg-Dutch German Sandwich Cut Swiss Cheese i Cassone's Buy One-Get One FREE Pnffn frfrnff Ecianh tT Salad ibffi) Bread . Buy One 1-Lb. At Regular Price Get 12-Lb. FREE! Sandwich of the Week lunieyyMHam ur rw Urii o JJ
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 29, 1983, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75