2The Daily Tar HeelFriday. October 4, 1935 O I o n n &C2 shuiiBQ- a fineness By LOCH CARNES Staff Wittet Fcsti-Fall. u community street fair sponsored by the Chapel Hill Parks and Recreation Department, will be held Sunday from 1-6 p.m. on parts of Franklin and Henderson streets. Attractions will include crafts, foods, music, and. information booths highlighting the work of various organizations, said Lori Lewis, the event's organizer. Aerobics and other activities will also be featured. The main stage, to be set up on Franklin Street near Columbia Street, will be the scene of dancing and music. Performers will include folk singers Susie Crate and Dave Holt, the Apple Chill Coggers, Cane Creek Cloggers, a new-wave group called the Bumblebees, and two more bands, Blind Date and .. Hot. Pursuit.;. . ''. ; The second stage near Henderson Street will feature the belly-dancing Oriental Expressions, the Chapel Hill High School cheerleaders, the Chapel Hill Barber Shop Chorus,, and more. There will also be a booth for anyone wishing to display a talent or act on the spur of the moment. Henderson Street will be the site for the Third Annual Chili Kickoff sponsored by WCHL Radio, with all donations going to the United Way. The Book Mobile and the town's oldest fire truck will also be there. ; V --" ) , ' - Lewis stressed that parking should be limited to municipal lots and that no alcoholic beverages would be allowed at the fair. By DEVI SEN Staff Writer Italian women have a better chance at life than American women do, a native Italian said Wednesday in the Union. Bianca Pomeranzi, the National Planning Director of the non-profit organization COOPSIND, has been touring the United States and observing American cooperatives. COOPSIND is based in Rome and assists cooperatives and small busi nesses in Italy by planning and assisting rural development programs, social programs and vocational training. Pomeranzi, who is in charge of supervising most training projects as well as doing feasibility studies, received the 1985 German Marshall Fund Equal Opportunity Fellow from Italy and came to the United States for six weeks to observe U.S. cooperatives and to offer suggestions to efficiently improve services.- - ', '-.".'.'. "In Italy, there is equal opportunity for women," Pomeranzi said. "Women can have the same wage and the same (amount of) responsibilty (as men)." Pomeranzi said American women had a poor relationship with their society in comparison with Italian women and their environment. "In Europe, everyone has this impres sion of American freedom," Pomeranzi viA "The United State is exaggerated. Life is harder for women because there is a great separation between each class, "There are too many stereotypes for women here. The working class is separated from the middle class,1 Pomeranzi said. The social structure in Italy is better and easier, she said. "The social life is better. The rela tionship between people is easier. The relationship between men and women (in general) is better." Pomeranzi said the younger women in Italy, between the ages of 25 and 40 were very interested in management and non-traditional jobs such as carpenters, plumbers and electricians. "The school systems, the universities, Alcohol from page 1 CGC the day care and hospitals in Italy are nationalized," Pomeranzi said. So it is free, and it is easier to leave the traditional family role-playing, she said." , : . Pomeranzi has visited several other states, including Maine and : Connecticut. Pomeranzi said she came to North Carolina because it was one of the states in the country with the greatest number, of cooperatives within in the state. "I don't know how I could use my observations to help Italy's coopera tives," Pomeranzi said. "But the reality is that the political system is better in Italy." from page 1 carrying ciassm From wire reports CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Atlantis, the fourth space shuttle in NASA's fleet, headed into space Thursday, reportedly to deploy two Air Force communications satellites. The sky was partly cloudy for the 11:16 a.m. launch. The exact launch time was kept secret until nine minutes before liftoff so Soviet efforts to track the shuttle and its contents could be hampered. Atlantis' payload is classified, but the Federation of American Scient ists say it includes two third gener ation defense satellites. Soviets offer reduction PARIS In exchange for a ban on space-based weapons, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev on Thurs day offered the United States a mutual 50 percent reduction in long range nuclear armaments. On the second day of his visit to France, Gorbachev's announcement marked the first , public Soviet response to proposals made by the Soviet delegation at the Geneva arms talks on Monday and Tuesday. The Soviet leader said he was - ready to discuss separately with France and Britain about their news in brief nuclear forces. Both countries refused to have their nuclear stock piles included in the U.S. Soviet arms negotiations. Gorbachev said the negotiations with Britain and France could be handled separately from the "Star Wars" negotiations with the United States. AIDS funding approved WASHINGTON The House voted to add $190 million to research funds for AIDS on Wednesday, the day film star Rock Hudson died from the disease. "No stone will be left unturned in research into the causes and treat ments and the potential cures of AIDS," Rep. Silvio Conte, R-Mass., said about the additional $189.7 million the House approved. The bill was approved 322-107 and sent to the Senate. The money was put in the 1986 appropriations bill of $104.9 billion for the Health and Human Services, Labor and Education departments and related agencies. Schroeder said he could not comment on any specifics of the subcommittees' findings because they had not met to consolidate them. One large report will be compiled from the subcommittees research, Schroeder said. The task force may or may not decide to make recommenda tions to change the present University drinking policy, he said. . Kuncl said that since membership of the Alcohol Committee and the Uni versity Task Force overlapped, there was a good chance the two recommen dations would focus in the same Freshwater PEARLS -W w or o ivy o vvWi omx' garnet, rose STlM 7 o University Square Chcpcl Hill 83S335 direction. James O. Cansler, associate vice chancellor and associate dean of student affairs, said that observing the raise in the legal drinking age to 21 was the only change that had to be made in the University's alcohol policy. Cansler chaired the task force three years ago that amended the University's alcohol policy following enactment of the N.C. Safe Roads Act. He said a formal change in policy probably would not come until next fall. There has been some talk in the UNC system this fall of establishing an informal committee to discuss alcohol use guidelines for each institution, Cansler said. He said many organizations were funded to make a statement about an issue. The Student Consumer Action Union, for example, is funded to make the statement that students are paying too much for things, he said. Many of the overfunded organiza tions don't have strong membership, he said.' , . V SEEDS supported AWS, and thatj played a bigger part in the ; group V funding than the vitality of the organ ization or the number of women students who knew about the organ ization and agreed with its views, Longest said. AWS returned $2,000 to Student Government, he said. Michael Polanyi Endowed Lecture for 1985 Dr. Clifford Grobstein, Professor of Biological Sciences and Public Policy in the Department of Science, Technology, and Public Affairs at the University of California at San Diego. "Science and the Unborn Monday, October 7, 1985, at 8:00 pm Main Auditorium, Hamilton Hall UNC-Chapel Hill Campus No Admission Charge A reception will follow the lecture J5 IfaDTE aislkffidi ffnir fitt CEncise MsM is ihkidw peim Ssitair cdsiss BRUNCH 10:00 am until 1:30 pm THE GRILL 10:00 am until 6:00 pm EWI2Y i V J z. ' S i - sign ell i 'sis; ns alt. OnascB Iffi&i 5) (Saturday Only) Fitgg Bite My Bagel" T-Shirts will be given to the lSffstt;;25 bagel customers at Chase Hall on Saturday, October 5th JJdDnim ma Sua GEnaoG. McM tMo Satnncdlas "Their funds were frozen for a good part of the year, and their organization, for all practical purposes, was just defunct," he said. "They didn't have nearly the same membership interest they had in the past." People want to defund the Carolina Gay and Lesbian Association for ideological reasons, he said, so the CGLA follows the treasury laws very closely, which gives the group's oppo nents fewer reasons to defund it. Many groups pad their budgets a great deal, he said, which hurts other organizations that don't get as much money as they need. But irresponsible spending policies by the group's leaders can also inflate a budget, he added. "The organizations every year are headed by different people," he said. "One year you can have very irrespon sible leadership . . , , and then the next year they may be the most responsible organization on campus." -. The CGC should look at a group's leadership rather than its past spending when deciding funding, Longest said, , but that isn't done. The most effective way to hold budgets down would be for CGC members to be "goddamn individual .. people" and. find, outbudgetinforma . tion on their own. rather . than relying on "other members, "he said. ShetDey seeks elecftnoirsi to Board of AJdeirinnieini By MITRA LOTFI Staff Writer Frances Shetley, chairman of Car rboro's Transportation Advisory Board, has announced her candidacy for the Carrboro Board of Aldermen. A long-time activist in Carrboro 's civic affairs, Shetley said in a prepared statement that she was ready to be active "on the decision-making level of the Board of Aldermen" because she participated in board advisory groups for 15 years. Beginning her civic participation as co-organizer of the Carrboro Appear ance Commission in 1970, Shetley belonged to the Board of Adjustment from 1973-1983, serving four of those years as chairman. In 1984, Shetley worked on the Bond Task Force. She supported the request Parking for $1,500,000 for street, sidewalk and bikeway improvements which passed in November 1984, and said that the money should be issued now to avoid rising costs. Another of her concerns , is the need for better management of town devel opment. Shetley wants to revise the present Zoning Ordinance "to deal directly with the current and future developmental impact on the public." Developmental problems, such as traffic congestion, street deterioration and parking, are issues she plans to address, she said. Shetley said she "would encourage promoting the public's awareness of the housing problems with conferences, seminars and other public forums." A UNC graduate, Shetley has lived in the Carrboro vicinity all of her life. from page 1 patrons going to see the Play Makers, Giles said. "We try and avoid football Saturdays by making sure we dont have matinees on that day," he said. "On those days rv i jo ftm&miy sgiD tJasm Ml TfTsraAfrftftfy JO1 ai ii mam tsvmsxm frfS n0w has Carolina Trivia Games 534.95 CHRISTMAS PRESENT"! the University refuses to let us park in front of Paul Green." " Giles said his " department tried to encourage PlayMakers patrons to park' in the Institute of Government lot, at the meters on Country Club Road and the cemetery, and on Gimghoul Drive. "Other than that, it's every man for himself," Giles said. "Our patrons know that." McNairy said she was going to appeal her parking tickets. "I live in Cobb," she said."I'm not going to park at Hihton James and walk." for the record Wednesday's story, "Many sides of the poli sci department," incorrectly stated that 600 students declare political science majors each year. The story should have said there are about 600 declared political science majors each year. The Daily Tar Heel regrets this editing error. ; Avoid the lottery blues. Apply now! All apartments on the bus line to' " UNC. Fantastic Social Program. Call today for full information. 967-223 1 or 967-2234. In North Carolina call toll-free 1-800-672-1678. Nationwide, call toll-free "-7 The Apartment People OS o o I o 1 SI SI 1 OB I O? 1 1 o I 1 I ii SATUMDAY ' FIELD HOCKEY vg. OLD DOMINION 1:00 PM Astroturf Field MEN'S SOCCER vs. COASTAL CASOLINA 3:00 PM Fetzer Field VATUIISID)AY (2l SUNDAY WOMEN'S SOCCEIi TAR HEEL INVITATIONAL n n p lo IS IS i: is IS I I o IO o lo 1 lo lo 1 1