V 12AThe Daily Tar Heel Thursday, August 21, 1986 K 2t EN ON ppfrn(C0 Baltfoyir House Has Moved From Chapel Hill' to 701 Ninth Street, Durham. Now it's Called Bog Jay's, a Balfour House. We now carry more Greek apparel, jewelry and novelties than ever: Cups, mugs, pens, pencils, key chains, memo boards, picture frames, pin pillows, wood products, teddy bears, socks, stationery, bumper stickers, buttons, balloons and much, much more all with your fraternity or sorority name already imprinted. All of our outstanding sportswear T-shirts, shorts, sweatgear and jerseys is made by Russell Athletic. Here's our FREE moving gift to you. Bring this coupon to our new Durham location and we'll sew your double colored fraternity or sorority letters on any 1 piece of our sportswear FREE! Plus, buy any item now and we'll give you a gift certificate good toward any purchase made on a subsequent visit. RUSSELL ATHLETIC FREE GREEK LETTERS ON OUR SPORTSWEAR. IT'S ALL RUSSELL ATHLETIC. 3 'minium ffiinimii g.i.i.i.r runt - i - , , ,- A IBALFOUM MOU 701 Ninth Street, DurhamN.C. 27705 286-3634 Offer good for up to 3 double-colored, sewn-on Creek letters on 1 item only. 1 coupon per customer. Good through Sept. 4. To get to Big jay's, take Franklin Street onto 15-501; exit DurhamHillsborough; right at light onto Hillsborough. At fork, bear right onto Main Street; left onto Ninth Street at Culf station. Plenty of free parking available. Campps plageed toy thief By MARIA HAREN Staff Writer An unidentified man, described only as being 30 to 35 years old, stole a total of $44 from six North Campus women's dormatory rooms Tuesday in what Campus Police believe to be related incidents. Police reports listed a 10:45 p.m. breaking and entering incident at Ruffin Dormitory, where a resident returned to her unlocked and unattended room to find a man holding her wallet. She said the man simply handed her the wallet and walked out. At 4:45 p.m., police went to Spencer dormitory where several thefts had taken place. In all four cases the rooms had been left unlocked and unattended. Two residents had $5 stolen from their purses; $12 was stolen from the purse of one resident and $22 from another. At 8:00 p.m. in Cobb dormitory, a wallet was taken from a room the resident had locked. Sgt. Ned Comar, of University Police, said the theft rate is higher than last year at this time. He said the thefts were due mostly to student carelessness, their willingness to risk theft by not locking their doors or dimply not knowing to keep their doors locked at all times. "Students say, 'this won't happen to me,' " Comar said. Since students find it inconvenient to always lock their doors, they should own a footlocker, he said. Sold at most department stores, the footlockers cost $25 to $30. To decrease their chances of theft even more, Comar said, students should always report suspicious persons around their dorms."To report a suspicious person," he said, "don't wait 8 hours and casually make mention of it to your RA. Go immediately and quietly to the phone and call Campus Police." ,This form of action will put would-be thieves on notice, he said, because people would call even if they just look suspcious. Comar said a typical thief is usually not a student, but a person from the town of Chapel Hill or Carrborro. "Leaches come to campus to suck the goods out of students without doing any work," he said. "Usually the same 5 percent of the population do all the crime . , . . If they keep at it, they usually get found and are tried for a conglomerate of things." North Campus dorms are the worst hit by thieves because they are closest to town and if the thief does not "get what he wants, hell go until he gets his Coke money or whatever it is he's looking for," Comar said. Students should keep their wallets locked in their rooms or lockboxes, he said, and carry only the money they will need to class. "The thief will have to risk himself many more times to afford lunch," Comar said. The most frequently stolen articles are money, jewelery and credit cards, he said. Jobs open as ..students returni By MELODY CREECH Staff Writer Since the beginning of time supply and demand have run hand in hand. If a demand is present, the need must be supplied. With the new surge of students at Chapel Hill, area busi nesses will have a heavy demand placed on them for more service. This demand can be met by the students themselves. Sylvia Price, director of the Orange County Economic Develop ment Commission, said that new jobs arrive with the new students at Chapel Hill. Most jobs appeal to and are geared toward students looking for part-time work with irregular hours, which is perfect in the hectic schedule of a student, according to Price. When asked if the job openings help the economy of Chapel Hill, Price stated that . . it doesn't hurt." "When the kids come back bus iness really perks up," said Brenda Stringfield, manager of Time-Out, a restaurant on W. Franklin Street. She is not picky, says Stringfield, but will take anyone student or not. Time-Out presently has job open ings for delivery people, cooks and cashiers. Deliverers: for the restau rant currently earn $3.50 to $4 an hour plus tips, and cooks and cashiers make minimum wage. Jenifer Erickson, manager of Four Corners is currently looking for a cocktail waitress to work late nights at the E. Franklin Street restaurant. Erickson agreed that students usu ally make good workers. Bob Hill, manager of Roman Wings on W. Franklin Street, is in need of delivery persons to work various shifts for an average pay of $6 to $8 per hour. At the other end of the scope, most students feel they can take a job, make some extra cash and manage their studies with no problem. Chris Ferris, a senior from Wax- haw, N.C., has been working in the UNC Photo Lab in Swain Hall for the past three years. He works about fifteen hours a week, and said that working ". . . hasn't yet" affected his school work. Jamie Swain, a senior from Raleigh, agreed. She works about 30 hours a week at the Tripodi Deli and manages a 15 hour class schedule. She says that working does not affect her grades, in fact ". . . it's easy," she says. For students interested in finding part time work and some full-time extra dough, job-hunting season is open. And with a little determination you can bag the job of your choice. For job listings check the want ads, Franklin Street stores and the University Personnel Department in Battle Hall. A few positions are available through the department and more will be coming when the semester gets under way. Men react to primate warnings From Associated Press reports NEW YORK Humans may recoil from the sound of fingernails on blackboards because it's similar to danger warning cries made by other primates, Northwestern Uni versity researchers report. The researchers recorded the sounds made by scraping a metal garden fork across a slate surface, Money can be saved on phone; service UNC students can save $10.25 on their telephone service connection charge if they use an application form and turn it in to Southern Bell by Sept. 15, according to a release from the company. The form, which was mailed to on- and off-campus students over the summer, is available in the Carr Building. It will also save time in having the service established. The phone will be connected four bus iness days after Southern Bell receives the application. Students are advised to keep a copy of the form for future reference before it sending it in. Campus Calendar The DTH Campus Calendar will appear daily. Announcements to be run must be placed in the box outside the Daily Tar Heel office, Room 104 of the Student Union, by noon one day before the event weekend announcements by noon Wednes day. Only announcements from University-recognized and campus organizations will be printed. Thursday 10:00 a.m.Sorority Rush T$6 registra tion, the Pit. Items of Interest "Women in American Physiology, 1890-1940," an exhibit of women's photographs, will be displayed on the second floor of the Health Sciences Library on S. Columbia St. through Sept. 25. then compared the sounds with naturally occurring noises. "We discovered the scraping sound bears a strong resemblance to the warning cries emitted by mon keys in the wild," they wrote in an article published in the September issue of Psychology Today. "Based on this resemblance, we speculate that our spine-tingling aversion to sounds like fingernails scraped over a surface may be a vestigal reflex inherited by our primate ancestors," pyschologist Randolph Blake wrote. The researchers also filtered the noise so they could separate high and low frequencies. Blake and psychologists Lynn Halpern and James Hillenbrand found that volunteers' reactions to the different frequencies were not what they expected. "Contrary to our expectations, we found that removing the high fre quencies had no effect on the sound's unpleasantness," wrote Blake. When just the lower frequencies were removed, however, the high frequencies on their own were rated "quaint and not at all unpleasant." THE BUS STOPS HERE! Chapel Hill Transit operates 12 bus routes serve all parts of the University, Chapel Hill and Carrboro. From school to shopping to home, Chapel Hill Transit can get you there. Listed below are major service points and the Chapel Hill Transit routes that serve them: ROUTE C.F.J A,D,F,G,J,N,P,T,U APARTMENTS Berkshire Manor Bolinwood Booker Creek Carolina Estes Park Foxcroft Kingswood Old Well Pinegate Rock Creek Royal Park Sunstone Timberlyne The Villages Woodbridge ROUTE C N G J N D J C, J D J J D, F T J C SHOPPING CENTERS Carr Mill Mall Downtown Chapel Hill Eastgate Glen Lennox Kroger Plaza Plantation Plaza University Mall Timberlyne Village D,F G D,F C F.G T UNC PARKING AREAS SAC Lot ("F" Lot) Manning Dr. Lot ("FR" Lot) Airport Rd. Lot ("P" Lot) ROUTE C,L,N,S C,L,NfS G,P,T 'Sw&SSX-X'XXtt WE HAVE A SPACE FOR YOU For Information on purchasing bus passes call the UNC Traffic Office: 962-3951 For Route and Schedule Information call Chapel Hill Transit 968-2769 v

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