Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 15, 1985, edition 1 / Page 2
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2The Daily Tar HeelTuesday. January 15. 1985 Delayed '84 ' Yackr coming in March, April The I9X4 Yackciy Yack will be ready for distri bution at the end of March or early April if no unforeseen problems occur, said Bryce Lankard, the yearbook's productions manager. Yack Editor Lisa Granberry said she had hoped the book would be ready in November, but com plications delayed its completion. 1 "Several pictures and layouts were stolen over the summer,"' Granberry said, and those pictures and others could not be taken until photographers returned to school in the fall. Staff changes in the middle of the year also resulted in a late start, she added. "The Yack could have been out earlier but that would have meant sacrificing quality," Lankard said. "We'd rather have lateness than poor quality." According to Granberry, the 4 book will have at least 400 pages and will not contain a lot of written copy. "It's a traditional Yack" she said.' "The students should be pleased with what they get," Lankard said. A waiting list has been started for students who want to purchase an 4 Yack but did not order one. Books nc ordered by subscription probably will sell for $20-$30 a copy, according to Granberry. Extra 3 Yacks also are available in the Yack office. Students who ordered books can pick them up at the Yack office, and others can purchase them for $20 per copy, Granberry said. LORRY WILLIAMS County residents can take a bite out of unsolved crimes The Orange County Community Watch Association has started its Crimestoppers program, offering rewards of up to $1,200 for information leading to arrests and indictments for cringes committed in this area. In the program, the Orange County Sheriffs Department, in conjunction with other local law enforcement agencies, releases information each week concerning an unsolved crime in the county. This information is released through newspaper, radio, and televi sion announcements asking area resi dents to help solve the crime. Anyone with information about that or any other unsolved crime can call the toll-free 24-hour Crimestoppers number, said Furman Herring, media coordinator for the Orange County program. "No one who calls us will be asked m Italian Restaurant announces its TUESDAY SPECIAL! ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT! With Mario's Famous Spaghetti Sauce, Salad, and delicious baked bread. - noorvlOpm 1ft 1 Apr (Beverage not included) 1 1 :30 a.m.-1 0 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. near Harris Teeter in 1 1 :30 a.m.-1 0:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat new section of Kroger Plaza 4 p.m.-10 p.m. Sun. All ABC Permits 929-9693 - t T t IWUIJ v- r I f f Af I ' ' i .1 ' ' !--,-r-t--j"S--- - - Yf .A. J d M I Tj. I . J t...:.j t:..i..JM :r i w w - r w s r i ; x r- - m . a m - i ft -r-?--: I 1 I I i I i linl I II ii i I i I I Hi i ii riml i i I I l l l i I i I r Seniors, do you have Phone Pover? Your volunteer help is needed for our '85 Class Gift Campaign. 30 callers are needed for each of 16 evening phone sessions from the University phone center in Hanes Hall. If you will be a callerfor the "85 Senior Class Gift Campaign, February 3-13, please contact: Scott Wierman, class president, at 929-8581 (6 p.m.-10 p.m.) or The Carolina Fund at 962-2336 (8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.) Seniors, this is your chance for your "special kind of spirit" to show! a ALL AAERCHANDISE ORDERED SOLDI iiImIum (?) O g o mm J l? 1M C m. Q SZPT'SHtfWS -MUSCLE SHIRTS SHf MM6LS T azs&cxoRs t Mi lvAUieTal( HEAWWttaHT 8" AND UP? , ii i i li-MSiiii ii ii ""'JLJ.' ' "" Vy -"V OVF.D Wa m MMKiiC i CANVAS LEATMtA OA All 1 1 AJMtR TCMNtS TENNIS RACQUtTftAU.. BASKCT8AJLX- JOGrGING- FROM X NME pjlAMO MANUACTLaS 1 M -V I iJ-T I BV I till. A 0 SLCtVt B Hi. V IV 1 1 I I I s a ii o win h m v BHaiiJi 'mMiiiu n 1 .m.' UOMtiSLTEVE T-SHIRTS Manv trait NOWOHX VftUKl VIKI mm SWEATSHIRTS SWEATPANTS AsscftriosTnes 1 SOCKS TOM CMW AOU.COF A 69 f ui f Iff v o a: O adrdas RRMUPHOOa OfPHt- POUCH NOW CNUf Si i . r 1 'I "Zoy. . TCNNI S . RA COUETBALl' "athlTIC FOOTWEAR. SPORTSWEAR -T SHIRT5 SOCK5 TUESDAY, JAN. 15th 10 AM-8 PM WEDNESDAY, JAN. 16th 1 0 AM-8 PM SSI. HOLIDAY INN - CHAPEL HILL US 15 & 501 BYPASS AT EASTGATE to leave his name," Herring said. "All callers will be given a code number, and any rewards are claimed with , that number." According to Detective Steve Chalmers of the Durham Public Safety Department, the Durham Crimes toppers program has been very success ful since it began in July 1983. I think the program is really a service to the community." said Chalmers, coordinator of the Durham program. "WeVe paid about $6,500 in rewards, and all the cases that have gone to court have led to convictions." Crimestoppers is a non-profit citi zen's group and obtains its reward money from donations. Herring stressed the need for contributions, saying, "Although the organization is made up of volunteers, money is needed to pay phone expenses and rewards." Anyone wishing to report crime information to Orange County Crimes toppers can call 1-800-851-7867. DORA McALPIN Carrboro urged to save water By BETH OWNLEY Staff Writer Carrboro residents living in the vicinity of the Orange Water and Sewer Authority on Jones Ferry Road have been asked to conserve water today because of a waterline which burst under the OWASA plant Sunday. Pat Davis, systems development coordinator for OWASA, said that he did not know why the 10-inch waterline burst. He said that the waterline was taking a long time to fix because of its rtti ft 1 Wife r 3 3 fT t4 : REAL PIT BAR B Q) 15-501 Bypass at Elliott Rd. in Chapel Hill 933-9248 FREE DELIVERY size. OWASA plans to open a line from Hillsborough today to provide more water to Carrboro. The line would be flushed to avoid odor and discoloration, Davis said. OWASA is asking its Carrboro customers to conserve water because of the low water pressure and low water supply. Davis said that OWASA would inform residents near the plant if their water service would be interrupted. Doug Terry, superintendant of OWASA, said that all residents should have water, but some people may experience short interruptions. Sandlin arraignment postponed From staff reports HILLSBOROUGH District Attor ney Carl Fox yesterday suspended the arraignment of Lester Sandlin until Feb. 11. An Orange County grand jury indicted Sandlin Dec. 10 on 25 counts of embezzling cadavers from the UNC School of Medicine. Sandlin was curator of anatomical material at the University until August 1984. Sandlin was indicted in August on 1 1 charges of embezzling cadavers. He also faces 25 additional charges of defrauding the Veterans Administration and the UNC medicaLjschool. Sandlin's arraignmeht was scheduled for 10 a.m. yesterday. 3 10 - 50 Off All Ski Clothing and Equipment Skis: Boots: Rossignol Lange Atomic Nordica Dynastar Technica Bindings: Clothing: Tyrol ia CB Salomon Roffe Marker Gerry Rentals:New Salomon equ'HDment Sample sale items: Ski Boots Reg. Sale Technica-Toronado Princess $95.00 $69.95 Star (rear entry, instep adjust ment with memory) $150.00 $129.00 Formula (advanced rear entry, memory instep adjustment, Thinsulate boot) $200.00 Skis Rosignol E750 $245.00 Atomic and Rosignol Ski Packages starting at $239.00 Gordini ski gloves with thinsulate$19.95 Insulated ski bibs reduced down to$39.95 Bic Sport car ski racks 20 off . ' " Where good sports get better Northgate, South Square, North Hills, Parkwood and University Malls $169.00 $169.00 -5V 1 v k 'Star Wars' may hinder talks From United Press International reports MOSCOW President Reagan's "Star Wars" missile defense program is a "trump card" and cannot be used as a bargaining chip in U.S.-Soviet arms negotiations, a Soviet commen tary said yesterday. The comments carried by the official Tass news agency followed warnings by Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko that continued deployment of U.S. missiles in Western Europe could jeopardize the talks, and failure to halt Star Wars could block other progress. Marcos: Rebellion growing MANILA, Philippines Presi dent Ferdinand Marcos, in a mes sage to the National Assembly yesterday, admitted for the first time that a communist rebellion in the Philippines is growing and has taken on a "new dimension." The message comes just two days after a U.S. envoy pledged American help in fighting the rebels a pledge opposition leaders say could get U.S. forces involved in a Vietnam-type conflict in the Philippines. Kennedy stirs South Africa JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Sen. Edward Kennedy's eight-day tour of South Africa has left the nation's minority whites united against the pullout of U.S. investment and blacks divided over strategies for their liberation. "He certainly has stirred things up," said his official host, Nobel Prize laureate Bishop Desmond Tutu, Sunday after Kennedy left Johannesburg for Lusaka, Zambia. "No one has been able to ignore him." Thai fighting continues ARANYAPRATHET, Thailand Heavy fighting was reported early yesterday in Thai border regions of Cambodia where Vietnamese inva sion forces have been bearing down on strongholds of Khmer Rouge rebels. Residents of Aranyaprathet, 120 miles east of Bangkok, said they could hear the sounds of heavy artillery and small arms fire from inside Cambodia. Preliminary reports said the fight ing yesterday was centered in the cews in Bris Klong Namsai area, 10 miles sou theast of the key Thai border town of Aranyaprathet. It was the second straight day of fighting in the Khmer Rouge-held border regions. There were no immediate reports of casualties. 4 Vessey: 'Much to learn' PEKING The chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff told Chinese military cadets yesterday the armed forces of the two nations had much to learn from each other. Gen. John Vessey, the highest ranking U.S. officer to visit commu nist China, addressed cadets at the Peoples Liberation Army Military Academy prior to an afternoon meeting with Premier Zhao Ziyang. Vessey's comments and the fact that he will meet with someone of Zhao's stature indicated the impor tance both sides place on promoting Sino-U.S. military exchanges, ana lysts said. Two French dead in Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon Two French truce observers assigned to duty in buffer zones between Leban on's rival factions were shot and killed yesterday as they drove through a Moslem neighborhood of Beirut, police sources said. The shooting came as the Israeli Cabinet prepared for a special session to vote on a phased with drawal that would remove all Israeli troops from south Lebanon by fall. Reagan urges NATO strength WASHINGTON President Reagan, touting "alliance solidarity" as key to arms talks with Moscow, placed the deployment of cruise missiles in Belgium at the top of his agenda yesterday for talks with Belgian Prime Minister Wilfried Martens. Concerned his negotiation hand would be "seriously weakened" by any hint of allied discord, Reagan hoped to persuade Martens to resist political pressure at home and proceed with NATO missile deploy ments set to begin in March. College loans still available College loan funds still are available for spring 1985 academic terms from College Foundation Inc. These funds are available for 'applications received by the foundation iip to 45 days before the end of the academic term covered by the loan request. Additional information and applica tions are available from financial aid offices at post-high school educational w institutions or diretrtryffYmitroilege Foundation Ine-I307i Glenwobdi Ave., RaleiglvNO27605:t n! n iv 1 v t ( X i S f k t-'-' (( vr ' ""-'J '-oV Ban the bucket and get rid of the greasiest Get the Fresh Alternative at Subway. Choose from 17 delicious sandwiches and salads made fresh before your very eyes. Franklin Centre 967-5400 IMa-WM ia iiil'lii'iii WiUow Creek 929-2288 II zsJQ S3: CIMB THE LETTERS TO SUCC Success is a long way up. But after taking the first step, the second one comes easier. Air Force ROTC can help you climb that ladder by providing a helping hand during college. It can enrich your college years and also help you with some of those school expenses at the same time. You can compete for a two. three or four-year scholarship that pays $100 a month during the school year, while it picks up the tab for all tuition, lab and incidental fees and books. The AFROTC program has many extras. Like the Right Instruction Program (RP), where you qualify for Air Force flight training through a screet ling process and receive introductory flight instruction. You'll also learn about leadership, management. Air Force history and traditions, and much more through AFROTC. The program prepares cadets to take command after they graduate and are commissioned as Air Force officers. The list goes on. Check it out today. See if you can climb the letters to success and meet the challenge and accept the commitment. You'll find that the Air Force is a great way to serve your country, and that AFROTC is a great way to get there from here. Don'twait See Captain Parker at Chase Hall or call 962-2074 I 1 fYT MlSS IT'SHQP T0DAY' :1 -v Gateway to a greet way of life
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 15, 1985, edition 1
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