The Daily Tar HeelThursday, August 21, 19865A .r reshmee welcomed! to UNC Iby Fordtoam9 I FTT " - r ,- w 13 - L - ss i! .. T x v '.i rt UNC Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III speaks at Student Store offers events calendar By ANDREA M. BEAM Staff Writer It comes in colors' like blue, gray, and Valencia red. And with it, no Carolina student should ever miss an event, deadline or any other infor mation vital to the Carolina student. "Carolina: Week by Week," a 12 month calendar of UNC events and important dates, was born from a collaboration between the UNC Student Stores and the Office of the Dean of Students. Packed between its covers are campus maps, facility office hours, library hours, concert schedules, important campus phone Modem library photocopiers take plastic By TERESA KRIEGSMAN Staff Writer UNC students and faculty won't have to carry a pocketful of change to the copy machines, starting this year. Plastic cards, not nickels, operate 37 new copiers installed on campus three weeks ago according to manager of printing and dupli cation Harold Wilson. According to the printing depart ment, the card-operated copiers,,, which cost $2,300 each, have replaced most of the university's coin-operated machines. Vending machines in the graduate library, undergraduate library and Stuideot justices collect history By MARIA HAREN Staff Writer A new and improved Student Supreme Court casebook, revised over the summer, will make legal red tape less sticky and confusing for the public as well as for court members Bus service survives federal budget cutting By SUSAN JENSEN . Staff Writer - Fears of lost bus service around Chapel Hill and Carrboro were allayed by Congress's veto this summer of an administration prop osal to cut over $500,000 in aid to the area's public transportation. Earlier this summer, Chapel Hill Transit officials had been concerned that federal funding would be cut, .according to Alan Tobias, assistant manager of the Transit company. , Congress, however, blocked the proposal in a recent session, and no change to that budget is foreseen, Tobias said. , The presidential administration has tried for six years to rescind all or part of the $991,000 in subsidies .that make up one-third of Chapel , Hill's $3,000,000 transportation .budget, he said. Those efforts have been part of a nationwide campaign to cut .corners on the public transportation .budget, he said, and all districts with public transportation faced the threat of lost subsidies. A few municipalities have private transportation systems which make ,them ineligible for federally funded .subsidies. R.L. Banks, a Washington con sultant firm, had estimated that Chapel Hill Transit could have lost between $100,000 and $595,000, based on governmental figures. Funding for the bus system would have expired Sept. 30. The Transit had hired Banks to come up with a contingency plan outlining rate hikes, route reschedul ing and other necessary changes if the subsidies were cut. Although there is now no need for the plan, the town has increased the transportation tax by 1.5 cents to 7 cents per $100 of assessed property value. This will provide the bus system with a $140,000 surplus. Chapel Hill Town Manager David R. Taylor has said he hopes to raise tax rates enough over the next three years to become independent fron federal Vi,saBy ""4 i, numbers and 40 pictures depicting UNC events and reflections of campus life at UNC. "We issued a calendar last January that was nice, but not as nice and personalized as this one," said John Gorsuch, media planner for the UNC Student Stores. "The Student Affairs Division thought there was a need for a 'catch-all' sort of publication." Beginning last April, Gorsuch worked with co-editors David Foun tain, Mary Scholl and Mary Evans in the three-month production of the calender, which is modeled after a law school library issue the new copier system cards. Patrons insert a $1 bill into the machine and receive a card, which costs 50 cents; a 50 cent credit also is added to their account. Up to $99 can be added to the account by inserting the card into the vending machine along with a SI, $5, $10 or $20 bill. All money in the account will transfer from Csemesteto;semser:r x ' A space is provided on the back of the card for the bearer's name, which will help the printing depart ment return a lost card to its owner. However, payment on an account themselves, a former Student Supreme Court Justice said. The book was produced by the Office of the Dean of Students, and it has copies of all the court's decisions since 1972. Before its reorganization over the subsidies in the future. A similar proposal for a surplus fund was introduced by the Carrboro Board of Aldermen, but nothing has been set up yet. Had the subsidies been lost, Chapel Hill Transit could have drawn on subsidies unused by Durham in a joint $2.7 million Chapel Hill, Carrboro and Durham federal funding pool. k - 159 E. Franklin St. I HtmmmmMm n ... ... I v '&w&v'" -mm Welcome to the "Soda Fountain" come in and visit with Joyce, Willie Mae and Reuben. They Ve been serving UNC students our famous homemade lemonade, orangeade, old fashioned milkshakes and good food for over forty years. COUPON COUPON COUPON Good for 1 FREE orangeade or lemonade at Chapel Hill's oldest drugstore A Carolina Tradition Since 1923 Student charge accounts welcome Good thru September 1st, 1986 1 per customer If 1 r- is;-: c Min , - l III i.n j DTHDan Charlson DTH Freshman Convocation similar release produced by the University of California at Irvine. Of the 7,300 calendars published, roughly one-half were distributed free to incoming freshmen. "The Student Affairs Division solicited donations from different school departments so that free calendars could be given to fresh men," Gorsuch said. The remaining calendars are available through theUNC Student Stores for $3.95. All proceeds from the sale of the calendars, as any other Student Store item, go to non athletic scholarships. cannot be stopped on a lost card not returned to one of the libraries or the printing department. To make copies, the card is inserted into a slot on the copy machine. The copier automatically deducts 6 12 cents from the account for each copy. Although the price of a copy has increased from 5 cents to 6 12 cents, the card system will actually help , keep the-prices o copies down in the future. ? ' v v r ' r': " "The card system is more flexible because we can increase the copy prices by a percentage of a cent," he said, adding that the price of a summer,"the casebook was a mess," said Beth Furr, the former justice and recent UNC Law School grad uate. The casebook decisions were compiled into one assembly "for the sake of precedence," she said. "There was a lot of concern on Chapel Hill Transit runs 12 routes in Chapel Hill and Carrboro. Two are new campus routes, one running from the Law School to the Student Activity Center with stops at Chase Hall, and the second running to P lot on Airport Road. Two new stops on, the J route to Rock Creek Apartments and on the C route to Woodbridge Apartments were also added. is 7 By JEAN LUTES Staff Writer "Walk down that. lonesome road, A 11 by yourself, Don 't turn your head back over your shoulder ..." The members of the Class of 1990 had already begun their walk down that lonesome road Sunday night, when they heard the University Glee Club sing James Taylor's words at Freshman Convocation in Memorial Hall. Most of the 3,300 freshmen arrived Saturday and were greeted and moved in by over 450 upper classmen on the orientation staff. They also met the orientation coun selors who would guide them through their first four days at Carolina. At convocation Saturday, Chan cellor Christopher C. Fordham III welcomed the veterans of one night of college dorm life. "Well have a very good time together, I assure you," he said, telling the freshmen the fact that they're at UNC demonstrates their good judgment, talent, "sparkle of intellect" and good upbringing. Freshmen should take advantage of the many opportunities for per sonal growth in their years at Carolina, he said. Besides expanding their knowledge and understanding, freshmen should grow in the capacity to express themselves, in the culti vation of communication skills and in spirit or "the search for ultimate truth." Fordham added that students also need to learn "to deal with other cultures in this shrinking world." Provost Samuel R. Williamson talked about the academic side of Carolina in his convocation address, encouraging the freshmen to embark upon their great intellectual adven ture with enthusiasm. Williamson also warned students to obey University regulations. "This is your great-adventure," he said. "Don't lose it in your freshman year." copy would have doubled to 10 cents if coin-operated machines were used. It also takes less time to make copies, Wilson said. "You don't have to keep up with coins and you don't have to drop in a nickel everytime you make a copy," he said. "It's just a lot faster." Nine of the card-operated mac chines are located in the graduate library, five are in the undergraduate library and the law school library has four. Other copiers are in the main departmental libraries. Operating instructions are posted near each vending machine and copier. of cases the part of the court members," she said. "Some of the court opinions were all originals. If we'd lost them we wouldVe been in big trouble." The new book will also help record keeping, Furr said, and make infor mation more readily accessible. "Court members . . . and other people needed better copies than what we could give them," she said. Furr said former Chief Justice Scott Norberg and current Chief Justice Maria Baxter were respon sible for getting the funding for the project. H M H H i ))i--y if I W i W ! . Szzzz lit v l V, v : '!. I ) He said UNC places a lot of stress on basic communication skills in an effort to help students communicate verbally, mathematically and through writing. The different perspective require ments allow students to realize the "enormous seas" of knowledge they can explore, Williamson said. That potential is complemented by the professors' ability to "probe and test and push" to find better solutions to scientific, mathematic, and phi losophical problems, he said. "We believe you will get a better education at Carolina than at any institution in this state, and it will rank among the best in the world," Williamson said. WELCOME BACK STUDENTS LOGOS BOOKSTORE IS YOUR PLACE TO SHOP FOR: Posters Poster Frames Lamps Memo Boards Clocks CalendarsOrganizers Address Books Cards Stationery Back Packs OPEN 9:30 AM-930PM MONDAY-SATURDAY "Serving The Chapel W II PROFESSION OF THE 80'S PARALEGAL TECHNICIAN "The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) predicts that over the next decade, the (profession) will be the fastest-growing career field in the country..." Working Mother Magazine. February 1986. 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Although the entire freshman class would probably only be together one more time, at graduation, Hassel reminded them, "We're not just a community when we're in the same room. "We're always a community," he said. To create a successful commun ity, he said students must cooperate, nurture their diversity, become involved and accept responsibility. ReligiousInspirational Books General Reading Books Lap Boards bibles 100 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27514 (919)942-7330 Hill Area Since 1971 mail for information- State 2lp Best time to call is OOKBAG BASS SHOES. this of Bass shoes at our regular low price. You'll find a terrific selection, all at up to 50 off suggested retail prices. Why? Because our shoes come directly from the fac tory to the Bass Factory Outlet saving you lots of money.