4AThe Daily Tar Heel Monday, August 27, 1984 Land p urchasedfof 17 alcohol-related arrests made area reservoir The Orange Water and Sewer Authority decided-last week to spend more than $200,000 for about 1 20 acres for its proposed Cane Creek reservoir. ' W. Everett Billingsley, who as executive director was authorized to complete the purchase, told board members that their final approval was necessary because of the size of the land purchases, about 1 1 miles west of Carrboro. The authority had previously reached agreements to purchase 58 acres from Elizabeth Cates for $93,960 and another 61.64 acres from Gertrude Pert v for $1 10,952. Military tuition for some UNC This summer the N.C. General Assem bly enacted a statute which says that members of the armed services abiding in North Carolina on active duty and their dependent relatives who live with them are eligible to pay the in-state tuition, even though they are not residents for tuition purposes. This military tuition benefit became effective July 1 and students who attended the second summer session were eligible td apply for the benefit. Because implementing regulations Nike Tiger Etonic Adidas Footjoy Brooks Converse Tretorn Saucony FREE T-SHIRT with purchase of any pair of regular priced athletic shoes. Coupon must be presented. (Expires 831 84) VliA "133 W. Franklin St The Carolina Union and Beach Club present Saturday, September 22 8:00 p.m. Z Carmichael Auditorium Limited Advance $11 .50 General Admission $1 2.50 . Tickets on sale, Carolina Union Box Office beginning 12 noon, Z Monday, August 27 . SURVEYORS S U P P L Y C O. HIGHWAY 64 APEX. N.C. 27502 TELEPHONE 362-7000 HOURS MON FRI 8:005:00 UWAbA has already purcnasea or reached agreements to purchase 683 of the 758 acres needed for the $ 14.5 millic r project. Billingsley was also authorized to continue a $70,000 engineering analysis and design for a temporary cofferd m across Cane Creek. Billingsley said the cofferdam would ci st about $600,000 to build. A temporary dam water and would allow gallons of water by the to be completed by by 10 million gallons benefits possible summer students could not be established and distributed before the beginning of the second summer session, any student who would have been eligible for the benefit during that session may file a written application for a refund of the out-of-state tuition differential with his or her admissions office before the deadline on Sept. 26. The late filing privilege, under the rules provided, does not extend to any other term. Students may obtain further details about the military tuition benefit from the admissions office. 1 I B 1 I I I I I Welcome Back Students from " - ATHLETIC WORLD (formerly Second Sale) OPEN 10-7 Daily 942-1078 10-6 Sat Un iversity .Square. ChageHHr 4 v jA s kv Don't head back to class without one of these great Hewlett-Packard calculators from Surveyor's Supply. HP 11C is an advanced scientific programmable featuring several powerful functions such as per mutations and combinations, hyperbolics and random-number generator. $62.95 HP 15C is the most advancea programmable calculator, with matrix functions, and more ready-to-use math and stat functions than any other scientific calculator. $104.95 HP 41CV communicates in numbers and words, and features a tremendous , built-in memory, RPN logic system, custom programmable keys, and can be expanded with available Hewlett Packard peripherals and software. $189.95 We ship anywhere. There is a $3.50 ship ping charge on orders of less than $100. In Wake county, please add 4Vj sales tax. Outside Wake,- please add 3 sales tax. m SAT 9:0012:00 NOON 5- f would impound about 50 to 60 acres of OWASA to begin drawing twfc million fall of 1985. The main dam is scheduled late 1987 and will increase waterlsupplies per day. VL . neips Support March of Dimes THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISI CHAPEL CYCLE S U -JILL JOP TUNE-UP SPECIAL 'l - $5.10 Lubrication & adjusment Adjustment of headknd pressure. GO Expert repairs on a service on tune-upsand in by 2 p.m. One da service on most other repairs. T VIVA ITALIA lUuVlU'JIWiifJIi Hmwm k$&m m YOU'RE NOT5EEING CLEARLY? Arrange to have C . Costabile examine your eyes now, befor school. Have your new eyeglasses or contct lenses fitted and have a clear foe s from the start. Dr. Thos as A. Costabile OFDMETRIST HOURS 235 Elliot Rd. Ndt to Mario's 9 6 m-F Kroger Plaza 8-4774 closed 1-2 M I J - EZt, J I 1 By MARJORIE MORRIS Staff Writer Chapel Hill police made 17 alcohol related arrests this weekend. Five people were arrested for under age drinking consumption of alcohol. Three people were arrested for drunk and disruptive behavior, and seven were arrested for public consumption of alcohol. Chapel Hill police Lt. Earl Allison said all the public consumption arrests were made on Cameron Avenue and South Coumbia Street. Other arrests included a youth arrested for drinking and driving on Airport Road, and an arrest was made at Hardee's on West Franklin Street when a person who was intoxicated refused to leave the premises. More arrests may have been made by the DUI extra-duty officers, Allison said, but he did not have those figures Sunday. A total of 37 people were arrested during orientation week, on alcohol- Computers have said that the system is slow. They complain that it takes too long to get a print-out, and that composing head lines is overly complicated. Perhaps the most frequent complaint is that there are not enough terminals. On Saturday afternoon when the offices usually are deserted every one of the paper's four terminals was in use. Last week, during production of a Franklin SL 5 c s cO o O to c S Repair Entrance o X of brakes, gears and chain wheel bearings and tire D THRU AUG. 31 mi iltiorcsoH KIIsac Qom'A How tire and tube work brought LATE SHOWS Fri.-Sat 11:39 Robert ASman'$ "STREAMERS" AnneCariis!ein"UQU!DXr' "WSder at his funniest since 'Stir CrazYl' KeOv Le Brock makes vou lf think Bo Derek's '10' had the decimal point in the wrong place!" Joel SieaaL 9 i Good Homing America TVnv iif.rVD m4 ,L-U 3, 5, 7:30, 9:30 KIMTEK STEREO 4 WHY WAIT UNTIL FIRST DAY OF TO REALIZE 3Pl-UJ IP related charges. Police reported Thurs day that the number of arrests made on Monday and Tuesday nights resulted form fraternity house parties near South Columbia Street and Cameron Avenue. Police said there were more arrests made Monday and Tuesday nights than there were for similar charges during the beginning of past school years. Thirty of the 37 arrested were charged with public consumption of alcoholic beverages. Others arrested were charged with underage consump tion of alcoholic 'beverages, which is a violation of state law. A Chapel Hill town ordinance was passed eight years ago, prohibiting the consumption of alcoholic beverages on public sidewalks, right-of-ways and parks. According to Capt. Ralph V. Pen dergraph, students are not totally ignorant of the law, and the arrests special Orientation issue and today's special sections, reporters and "editors had to wait up to two hours for a free terminal. DTH General Manager Anne Fulcher who helped secure the 13!4-percent, 5-year loan from Central Carolina Bank that paid for the system said she acknowledged the problem but doubted there would be enough money this year to purchase additional terminals. Even so, .just getting more "tubes" might not solve all problems. There remains a resistance to change. For example, some staffers retain an affection for the old manual typewriters and refuse to approach the new Avoid the lottery blues. Apply now! All apartments on the bus line to UNC. Call today for full information 967-2231 or 967-2234. In North Carolina call toll-free J -800-672- 1 678. Nationwide, call toll- free 1-800-334-1656. The Apartment People A Popular A. if M& i Known For Its Lunch Buffet and Family Dinner at Reasonable Prices Spacious Dining Area Available For BANQUETS Convenient Location With Plenty of Parking Spaces 1404 E. Franklin St. Open 7 days a week Chapel Hill, NC Buffet Lunch 11 am-2 pm 929-7185 Dinner 5 pm-10 pm W IcoDTiG rf , PREPARATION FOR: n b.Mf7 1 44 rrnri'in Lw-JL'lM-JLJ have been caustu mostly by students taking their parties onto public property. James O. Cansler, UNC associate vice chancellor for student affairs, said Thursday that the use of alcoholic beverages on campus, except at Ehringhaus Field on South Campus and Forest Theatre off Country Club Road, is prohibited by the University. Students are allowed to consume alcohol in and immediately near campus residence halls, but they are not allowed to purchase the alcohol with University funds. University rules do not apply to fraternity houses because the houses are not on University property, Cansler said. Police met with Student Govern ment leaders last week to discuss ways to prevent similar occurrences. Pender graph said campus leaders were coop erative last year, and he had no reason to believe they won't be this year. from page 1 machines. They prefer letting someone else enter their stories into the computer after they've banged it out on one of the Royals. All in all, though, the, good would seem to outweigh the bad. The compu ters will allow greater editorial and financial independence for The Daily Tar Heel especially in five years, after payment of the loan is complete. Also, it means the paper can do a better job of educating aspiring journalists; stu dents will gain ample hands-on expe rience with modern newspapering electronics. All of the equipment was purchased from the Greensboro offices of Varityper Corp., which won the contract after the DTH spent more than a year studying proposals from several firms. Equipment purchased includes four Epics terminals for writing and editing ($37,000); one Comp Edit 6400 terminal and image previewer for typesetting ($34,480); a film processor ($4,950); a used VGC advertising camera ($3,000); and a service contract ($9,771). DO SOMETHIIIG WILD! Adopt a wild horse or burro from the U,S. Government Write for details to: Bureau of Land Management 350 S. Pickett Street Alexandria, Virginia 22304 Chinese Restaurant Back UNC Landlubbers NC 54 East to Raleigh Uniw L ' Motel J ill olAil 2634 Chapel Hill Blvd. Quito 112 - Durham NC 27707 1-800-672-5919 EDUCATIONAL CENTER 919-489-8720 919-489-2348