Harris Teeter HSI
USHSHI **”“*
Sale Begins Wednesday, Sept 10,1996
® Diet Coke Or
Coca Cola
99*
Stauffer's Selected Varieties
Animal Snyders
Crackers Pretzels
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Smacker's Frito Lay
Crape Variety Selected I&rieties
Jelly Pack Catorade
AA( f 99 f 69
ffl® fees®
JKr32 Oz. 9.250* HjKlaßl 640*.
oz. Bag Selected \&rieties
Jn f
fafafeag
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Bulk
Bagels
3/yy
Prices and Offers Good Wednesday, Sept 4. Through Tuesday, September 10,1996
At All Chapel Hill Harris Teeters.
We Reserve The Right lb Limit Quantities. None Sold Tb Dealers.
6
Wednesday, September 4,1996
BARNES
FROM PAGE 1
eariy to know how Barnes’ withdrawal
will affect the election. Hackney said he
did not plan to change his campaign
strategy.
Republican candidate Dan Buedel had
not heard about Barnes’ announcement
until contacted by The Daily Tar Heel.
REACTION
FROM PAGE 1
ate action.
Lassena Sperlock, a sophomore inter
national studies and economics major,
said she disagreed with Ginton’s actions.
VOLUNTEERS
FROM PAGE 3
county and assist in a wide variety of
tasks, she said.
"(The students) do a whole range of
things: from playing the piano to helping
out in the art room to clerical work," she
said.
Bailey said the response to the pro
gram from teachers and volunteers has
been positive.
“We get many comments saying ‘This
person is wonderful’,” she said.
Rosemary Edgerton, a reading coor
dinator at Frank Porter Graham Elemen
tary School, said the volunteers helped to
strengthen the goals of her reading pro
gram.
“Some of the parents can’t get to read
ing with their children,” Edgerton said.
RENT
FROM PAGE 3
get out of control, the extra expense of
being located on Franklin Street is bal
anced by being located in such a highly
traveled area.
“We talked about opening at Eastgate
or in a mall, but the foot traffic was what
we wanted, so the prices on Franklin
Street are worth it.”
Merchants in neighboring Durham can
take advantage of college foot traffic at
lower costs than their Franklin Street
counterparts. Ninth Street in Durham,
located within walking distance from
Duke University, has many shops and
restaurants similar to those of Franklin
Street.
John Valentine, co-owner of Regula
tor Bookshop located on Ninth Street,
said rental prices on Franklin Street are
Bizarro
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THE Daily Crossword by Diane C. Baldwin
ACROSS
1 Lady of rank
5 Dervish
10 Garden item
14 Give approval
15 Cream of the
crop
16 Reps.
17 Holland sight
18 Pulls out the
stops
20 for the
money...”
21 Paddy plant
22 Queen of
mystery
23 Show
appreciation
25 Auctioneer’s
aim
26 Sedan shelter
28 Move with
urgency
32 Fill with awe
33 Fischer's game
34 Bygone Mideast
coalition
35 “I Love —” (old
TV show)
36 Call up
37 Snare, for one
38 and ye shall
receive”
39 Prattle
40— hand (help)
41 Convention
meetings
43 Particular styles
44 Latvia native
45 Certain African
46 Grief relief
49 Pond plant
50 Kind of Jazz
53 Gets a move on
55 Up to the task
56 Tide’s partner
57 Court event
58 Professional
charges
59 Sorrowful
sounds
60 Contest prize
61 Horse gait
DOWN
1 Stupid fellow
2 Related
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NEWS
“Obviously, that changes it a little bit,”
he said. “Any election still goes to the
best person for the job.”
The other Republican candidate, Tracy
Fowler of Pittsboro, said he thought the
district Democratic Party was well
funded enough to promote any new can
didate. “They have a lot of money to get
the name out,” he said. “(Barnes) was
entrenched. It’s still going to be a tough
“Clinton has waffled too much on
foreign policy. Nobody respects him be
cause he has no foreign policy,” Sperlock
said.
“I don’t like Saddam Hussein, but
what right do we have to invade in inter
nal affairs?”
“The volunteers help fill that void.
"The whole experience has been re
ally positive for me. You meet some
really wonderful people,” she said.
Another important aspect of the vol
unteer program is relieving some of the
teachers’ workload, Edgerton said. She
said the volunteers added to the learning
process after the school day is over.
“(The volunteers) are an extension of
me and the parents during the school
day," she said.
Betsy Booth, a family specialist at Estes
Hills Elementary School, said the stu
dents were crucial to the survival of her
after school tutoring program.
“We wouldn’t be able to run our pro
gram without them since we don’t have
enough funds," she said. “This program
is a great thing.”
The student volunteers also benefit
about 30 percent higher than those of
Ninth Street.
“Ninth Street is like Franklin Street
was 15 years ago,” Valentine said.
“What’s happened on Franklin Street is
that as landlords look for franchises and
brand names like The Gap, they price out
the smaller, funkier businesses.
“It’s tough because the high overheads
make it almost impossible for someone
who has a dream of opening a clothing
store or restaurant,” he said.
Valentine said the diversification of
businesses has also been eroded in
Durham.
“In the early ’Bos even Ninth Street
had a wider variety of stores and oppor
tunities than it does now," Valentine
said.
Joel Harper, president of the Chapel
Hill-Carrboro Chamber of Commerce,
said he has not received an unusual
SECURITY
FROM PAGE 3
campus. “We want to get more (officers) out of their cars and
out on foot,” Gold said.
“So far, bike patrols have been very effective in helping curb
crime.”
Gold noted that perhaps one of the biggest reasons for the
large increase in re
£*:£££ 1995 Arres,s
mg willingness to Alcohol Violations 28
call the police and Drug Violations 34
report such crimes. Weapons Violations 7
This willingness may
stem from increased source: unc-chapel hill 1996 security report
confidence in Uni
versity Police service, he said.
Numerous programs are also being initiated in order to
promote awareness in preventing such assaults. Lt. Angela
Carmon, a crime prevention officer, has been instrumental in
implementing programs such as Rape Aggression Defense
training, Gold said.
Gold also stressed the importance of the police department
working more closely with student government and other focus
groups to address these issues. “It’s important that we get
feedback from the campus, so we will know how to apportion
our resources and find out how we can better serve the public. ’’
3 Hotfoot it
4 Storm center
5 Puma or civet
6 Smart (wise
guy)
7 High flier
8“ a Wonderful
Life”
9 Practice a role
10 Globetrotters’
home
11 Fairy tale beast
12 To-do
13 Catch site of
19 Raines and
Fitzgerald
21 Current fashion
24 Indistinct
25 Public tiff
26 Elegant events
27 Entertain
28 Gunfire
29 Roar off
30 Magna cum
31 Bombeck et al.
33 Intone
36 Objects
37 Bumper boo-boo
1 2 3 4 6 7 8 ® ■■To - 11 12 113
>4 S ~ HI -T
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20 ■■2 l Hp 2
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46 47 48 *SO“ 51 52
53 54
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race.”
UNC student and Natural Law Party
candidate Rifkin Young said Barnes’
withdrawal breathed new life into his
campaign.
“ I’m hoping a lot of people who voted
for her will consider voting for the Natu
ral Law Party," he said. “It’s a little more
drive for me (to campaign).
“I’m psyched.”
Dan Thompson, a junior economics
major, said keeping up morale was more
important than possible political impli
cations.
“I feel it’s important that we support
American troops regardless of our feel
ings toward President Ginton.”
from the experience.
Heather Massengale, a sophomore
education major from Charlotte, said she
learned from her students.
“It just reinforces the fact that you can
make a difference,” she said.
Having seen the positive results of her
work with the students, Massengale said
she planned to volunteer with the pro
gram again.
“I really made a difference and I had a
great time,” she said. "At the beginning
of the year they had a lot of questions and
at the end of the year they knew what
they were doing.
“It was really neat.”
Individuals interested in volunteer
opportunities may contact the Volun
teers and Partners for Education for
Chapel Hill-Carrboro Schools at 967-
8211, ext. 821.
amount of complaints from business
owners regarding the cost of rent on
Franklin Street.
Harper said the rent rates for business
space on Franklin Street ranges from a
low of s2l to a high of $25 per square
foot.
“The few complaints I’ve gotten have
typically been not so much from existing
businesses but from people looking to
bring businesses here,” he said.
“They might say that the price is too
high or that it’s higher than they thought,"
he said. “But, you can tell from the lack
of vacancies that there are plenty of people
willing to pay.”
There is significant turnover of small
businesses on Franklin Street, Harper
said. However the turnover is no worse
than in similar areas. “Being a small
business is tough, period no matter
where you are."
© 1996 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved
39 Recital number
40 Musical Horne
42 Quenches
43 Geese group
45 “ House”
(Dickens)
46 Atl. fliers
47 Indiana neighbor
48 Barnyard baby
49 Inter
51 Bread spread
52 Annoying
person
54 Museum display
55 Toward the
stern