Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 11, 1974, edition 1 / Page 2
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Thursday, April 11, 1S74 e act ion to new permits mixed 4 f I 8 (I U t4 Wei e u "H O The Dally Tar Hesl ill f r . A. by C.U Welsh CiaffVrilar This week's announcement of new campus parking regulations with a limited number of expensive permits has drawn a mixed student reaction and caused a big headache for the University traffic office. William D. Lock, administrative director for the Traffic and Registration Office, said he has been flooded with student complaints and questions. "It seems like I have been spending 90 per cent of my time on the telephone answering questions and listening to complaints. I'm not getting any work done," he said. The complaints, Locke said, stem from a fear of being left without a place to park next year rather than a concern with the price or possible inconvenience. "We've had all kinds of complaints but primarily people are afraid they might be left out. They just don't like the idea of being forced to park out at the airport," he said, referring to the inexpensive alternative of driving to one of the Fringe lots and catching a shuttle bus onto campus. Locke said he tells all callers faculty, staff and students the same thing. "We just don't know yet how many people won't get permits. What we are hoping is that people will carpool. If people do that, things ATTENTION SENIORS! The Air Force has open ings for officers in the fields of civil, mechanical, elec trical, aeronautical & aer ospace engineering, com puter science & math. Be nefits include outstanding pay, steady promotions, travel, medical care, 30 days vacation. SGT. TOM LAMM Post Office Building Durham Phone: 682-5381 5--7-1! SON Cf 7M0 Young love takes the helm . and DAD FLIPS OUT! I YLT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS' TECHNICOLOR 0 1973 Walt Disney Productions M O MM Walt Disney Productions UAST DAY CQM SHOW: 7-Mo-t-,S SHoS ,5, fhzre ths lilies hJoorn SHOWS' 1 '-I 4 a 2.'00-:50 "fju I (1th The Daily Tar Heel i published by the University of North Carditis Student Publication Bcrd, dally except Sunday, xa'm periods, vacation, and umiwr periods. No Sunday issue. The following dates are to be the only Saturday Issuer. September 15. 22. ft 29. October 27, and November 10 17. O'l cs are at the Student Union bullulng, Univ. of ' North Carolina, Chitpel Hilt, N.C. 27314. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 833-1011, 933-1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1183. Subscription rates: $16,00 per year; $1.00 per semester. Second class postage paid at U.S. Poet Office In Chapel Hill. N.C. The Campus Governing Council tha'J-rvive powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate all revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution). The Daily Tar Keel reserve the right to regulate the typographical tone of ail dvertieementa and to reyfse or turn away copy It considers objectionable. The Daily Tar Heel vrii! not consider adjustments or payments for any typographical errors or erroneous Insertion unless notice Is given to the Business Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement appears, or within one day et the receivng of tear, sheets or subscription of the paper. The Daiiy Tar Heel wiil not be responsible for more than one incorrect Insertion of an advertisement scheduled to run several time. Notice for such correction must be given before the next Insertion. :0. , .5 -5 5 S Murray Pool , Business Mgr. Adver. fcSgr, Michael Schiftan.. m p. CO-WT Y""? .AS. - S in 4 T. 1 i ) i ' i won't be too bad," he said. Locke said he was optimistic about the system's success. He said a survey taken recently showed that although there are twice as many cars registered now as there are spaces, the campus is only about 1,000 spaces short of the actual number needed to accomodate everyone who must drive and park. A lot of people have two cars registered now, he said, noting that under the new plan no person or family will be able to register more than one vehicle. If you take that into consideration, we will only be 400 or 500 people without permits," he said. If enough people will carpool, he said, the shortage shouldn't be too severe. . Many complaints, Locke said, are from people who live south of Chapel Hill where the community bus system will not service. Most of those people are afraid they will not be able to get a space on campus and will have to get up early and drive to one of the fringe lots on the north or west end of town so they can catch a bus back to campus. A possible solution for those commuters is the construction of a third fringe lot serviced by a shuttle bus, Locke said. "We might need a perimeter lot on the south side of town," Locke said. "Both sides of Manning Drive down below Hinton James would be a good place," pt KoXof?i iJ& i it-. ,t;t".' 'rA3A3iocD'v"l2 'ivw.hsv M t-? i i -1 ' i:ni :r tir-.unt-Jt-- ir-ii i 'Hit U ODUD All n at the pio This includes: i Beef Sukiyaki 1 or Chicken I wCashew Nuts plus Egg Rolls Fried Rice Chicken Egg Drop Soup Jello Molds Tossed Salad Tea or Punch 1 1 1 8 i i S3 4 M U il U. il B I y I.UL . .11... . .1.11 .UI.U, .... , , I Ami i Utoif I . it Q ; I at . '" "" ' rjy THURSDAY 5-6:30 p.m. Meal Plan Tickets Will Be Honored I 11 While most of the complaints received by the traffic office have been about possible inconveniences of the new plan, Locke said there has been no shortage of gripes about parking prices. The price of the permit, $54 for a nine month period, an unlimited pass to ride" the new buses, which will begin rolling in August. But Locke said many people have told him they will never ride the bus if they get a parking permit and ask for a partial refund for the price of the bus ticket. I tell them it is all a package deal. The University is paying $300,000 a year for this bus system, and there's no other way we;an think of to saise the money," he "said. Jarvis Sinclair, presiding officer of the Graduate 'and Professional Student Federation, said he thinks most graduate students like the new plan, with its virtual guarantee of a parking space for those who are able to obtain a permit. "It's the best that can be done under the circumstances, Sinclair said. Sinclair said his major complaint with the system is that graduate student instructors and teaching assistants "are being put at the bottom of the departmental totem pole. Faculty parking permits will be distributed by a system determined within each department and Sinclair said he thinks the graduate assistants will be excluded. .,ji.1ui;,a v THBSTIMG 8:50 BARGAIN PR Goodwill Storo 1121 W. Main Street, Durham Phone: 942-3141 Open Mon.-Sat. 99 1:50 4:10 ,6:30 CGS o n I U w f i ifi t" f n f" ' 1(3 Vanishing Point Sunday 11:15 it sJearis sn O 122 E. Franklin You wanted I s ft. avjerat-iv 2t-v r r- .- ts. here it is. J S Your final 1'' fm chances to 1 XlJ coo i I v v 3f'i A I 1 MOW I i ae - thru '"v ' Fi!j Saturday "Outragsously y movie!" ! BifgWK -Saturday WWIs . Review t ("PPCCrp Shows U iki.iwtd 1-3-5.7-9 r,,,rvv Co!or V Jl J ) Ua one under C i ,. 17 agmitteJ. He said each department should have a lottery with all faculty and graduate students given an equal chance. There will be nearly 5,000 permits for faculty members, and those who drew up the plan were "very careful to give them almost enough spaces for all the faculty, he said. "The faculty said they need it because they have classes at given times they have to go to. But they have ignored the teaching assistants who have the same classes. It's a two-edged sword," he said. Sinclair said he thinks graduate students should be given as much priority as seniors when the Campus Governing Council .establishes an allocation system for distributing the permits among the students. "Graduate students and seniors might be considered together as top priority, but that has to be worked out. Some grad students have been here eight or nine years, and it would be unfair to deny them a permit," he said. But while Sinclair is concerned about the permit allocations, he said their price is not unrealistically high. "Unlike most other students, most graduate students have been to other schools, and really, $54 a year is cheap compared to other schools," he said. . Lee Corum, a graduate student who has worked on the development of the new parking and bus systems, said the plan will work to everyone's benefit. "We will have basically the same number of spaces on campus as we have now. What we are doing is taking the money from the permits and applying it to the fringe lots and the bus system," he said. RECONDITIONED FURNITURE Reupholstered Sofa Beds, Couches. . . from $49.50 Reupholstered Chairs. .......... .from $14.50 Used Mattresses (sterilized). ...... from $5.95 New Innerspring Mattresses & Boxsprings. from $29.95 WE DELIVER ' utrj wnnrnnnnrn seas 4& sceJ uuuLiuyuuu r n f" fo)C! Carolina Theatre $1.50 it Kits exxj THE MOST STINGING ASSAULT "N mi tpi cirioint i PiriPC it I UIJ ICLCUIOIUii OliibC II WAS INVErnEDl'Ipiayboy W5' 1 sr.. Pi...! JJeain SEiirs Levis O Plushbottoms O New Digs O Bobbie Brooks Sizes 5 to 15 University Mall Today's Activities The Psychometric Laboratory and BlostatlstJee OepertMnt of UNC eHB preeent Proteeaor Jen de Leeww o Befl Tekrphone Laboratories and the Data Theory institute, Leiden, The Netherlands, who w3 spek on "A Hew Approach to Konrnetrte Scaiing. The Coftoquiuni wa be held in Room 1C1 Davie Kail at 4:03 p.m. today Refmhmenta wiB be served at 330 in Room 101 Davie Hast Al are Invited. There will be a service of worship at 8:15 today at the B3e House (Baptist Campus Ministry) preceded by recreation at 5. The topic wil be The Humanity of Jesus." The UNC Department of Chemistry wil present Professor A0an KacDIarmid from the University of PennsfKanta who will speak on "Even-Electron SI! icon Compounds" today at 4:00 pjn. Coffee wta be served tn the tower lobby at 333. Undergraduate Education Majors: Preresistratloo advisement sessions will be held today from 4:00-6:00 pjn. Locations for these sessions are posted sn Peebody HaiL The Preparatory Lecture on Transcendental Meditation wil be tonight at 7 JO in Room 101 Greenlaw. Admission is free. There will be a meeting of the Student Academic Advisory Committee tonight at 730 In Room 212 of the Union. The meeting shouid be brief; old and new members are asked to attend. Collegiate Ctvltan Bike-Hike Pledges will be collected In the Student Union today from 3-6:30 p.m. They may also be sent to Bos 25, Student Union. Monday is the lest day to be eligible for the grand prize, an autographed UNC basket bait Christian Science Organization meets regularly each week: on Thursday at 5:15 In the Union. Topic for this week: "Unity with God How can we make It work to bring about unity and understanding among men?" Check the calendar in the lobby for room number. The CGC Appointments Committee will hold hearings tonight at 8:00, In Room 206 of the Union. The annual APO Campus Chest Auction will be held tonight in the Great Hall at 7:30, with John Ail en Brown as auctioneer. Dr. Thomas Moinar, Professor of French Literature and Intellectual History visiting UNC, will speak on "Chartea Maurras and the French Right Reflections on Alternative Cultural Thought," Monday night April 15, at S. The lecture will be held on the third floor. New West BuHding, Dialectical Philanthropic Society Chambers. The CGC Rules Committee will meet tonight at 7 in the CGC office in Suite B of the Carolina Union. Items of Interest LOST: Irish Setter wearing brown collar. Answers to Ivan. Reward offered; call 967-4877. LOST: Ladies gold and diamond ring at Franklin Street sidewalk by University Service Station, Thursday morning. Reward. Cell 929-7278. Lightnin' Hopkins has been playing the blues for 50 years. Don't miss this rare appearance of one of the greatest blues artists ever. April 12 and 13 is K 1 n kl PJ VI VTi f ' i I JEVELRY 57? TTi f A fine collection of original, handmade Navajo, Zuni and Sante Domingo Indian jewelry direct from the reservations in Arizona and new Mexico. Items are of silver, turquoise, red coral mother of pearl. Individual pieces from $5.00 to $200. APRIL 11, 12, 13 at the DANDELION St t t C3 r rrs I lit "N - ft t M 4i ft W f An j 39! m:3Buwr!G cagtoqus snoM 4V 02. to JOrtJI e" ear r j jp- w w 9 r s $ ME lies' rap to ths mocu" (i-n ae.htif t TICS DmoSAUrL,lifi "ni .r-it lliT woum.. oomAld Duel;.., GOOFV... DLA: PETE... 0US5 BUnC3V..e CLMEfl SUPERMAN... m&iiTy Mouse.,, dapfv dug:;.,, al'd s (flBU. LOST: Brown teethe shoulder purse, emal pink, grn do.tgn. Cut-ot-stata: Need driver's license. Reward caS S Swam at 933-4106. Lost and found articles hare accumulated in Wilson Library- umbrellas, books, notebooks, class rings and miaotHareous Jewelry. May be Identified and claimed at the Circulation Desk between a.m. and 3 p.m. week days. Lost: Between Union and Morrison dorm, Wednesday, April 3, Man's sflvev "Zodiac" watch. Reward tor return. Call 933-4015. 933-3308 or come by Morrison 831 or 808. Ail students who took Englsh 1 and or 2 within the last year (Spring 1973) who wish to pick up their pepers from lh Er,S!;sh office, should come by Room 200 Greeniaw and leave their names before Friday. The papers will be returned one week after that date. The Health Science Library hours win be the same during Ess w as during non-Holiday hours. SPANISH 35 Latin American Prose Fiction in Translation. We're back with even a greater variety and selection of greet novels and short stories from south ol the border No knowledge of Spanish is necessary. Be sure to pre-register It you want to enjoy your Fan semester. Call Read Gilgen (933-2062) for further details. MCAT (Medical College Admission Test) applications sre due m Iowa City, Iowa on Friday for the May testing. This dsts is a better one tor taking the admission test for entering in 1975-76. A 2x2 photograph and $20 are needed with the application. Applications are available at the Guidance and Testing Center In Nash Hall (across from the Inn parking lot); Dr. Straughn's office, 31 2 South BuHding; Arts and Sciences, 20S South Building and the Medical School Admissions Office, 226 McNlder. Counselors are available for discussing med school and health career options at the Guidance and TesSng Center. Call 933-2175 for an appointment Going to summer school? The Kappa Delta Sorority House win be open both sessions. $200 per session Includes room and board. The house Is located at 219 E. FRANKLIN Street across from the Planetarium, close to campus and downtown. It Interested call the KA house at: 968-9160 or 942-4609. First come, tint serve. Lost $50 In bUls (two $20 and one $10) on campus somewhere, on Tuesday. There is a small reward offered to some honest person. 833-5389. Live in luxury and air conditioned comfort this summer. Lunch and dinner five days a week, free parking, sun deck. $230 per summer session. Women only. Call 968-9398 or write Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, 227 E. Rosemary St Jim Keenan. who's running tor district court Judge in Durham County, needs campaign workers. If interested contact Can dace Carrawey at the Law School. People's Coffee House sponsored by Gay Rap Group. Everyone invited, entertainment and refreshments. 306 E. Rosemary, P.m., Friday. Carolina Quarterly Invites all those interested in reading or working for the CQ to an Informal party, Friday, at 3:00 p.m. in the Graduate Lounge, Second Floor, Greenlaw Hall. Positions are open especially in Poetry and Business management, as well as In Fiction. Refreshments will be served. only! tickets on sale now 113 West Franklin St. Mil ? sfs Jy vf V7 OZ Irk ' in s? r r n i .COVO O (13 AT., APa. csf a(A5e RK Sff'''''
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 11, 1974, edition 1
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