Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 22, 1976, edition 1 / Page 2
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the Daily Tar Heel Monday. November camptas caleoda Public service announcements must be turned in to the box Union by 3 30 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item Activitlts Today The UNC Outing Club's second silk-screening session (for white ink) will be from 5:30 to 7 p.m.. Monday. Nov. 22, in Room 204 of the Carolina Union. Do you know how to prepare a resume? Come Lifeline, Fair Share options Assembly to hear electricity by Russell Gardner Staff Writer An alternative to the pricing structure now used by North Carolina utilities companies will be introduced before the state legislature in early 1977 by Rep. LoraTalley, Democrat of Fayette ville. Under the present system, business and industry pay a lower utility rate than residential customers. The first of these rate reforms, know as Lifeline, would guarantee that energy for the basic necessities of heating, cooking and lighting will be available at a low fixed cost to all residential customers. Carolina Action, a state consumer group sponsoring the legislation, is proposing that all residential users, regardless of how much electricity they use, pay $10 a month for the first 500 kilowatt hours (KWH) used-or 2 cents per KWH. The second of these rate reforms, known as Fair Share, would guarantee that Recruiters to visit appointment sign - The following corporate recruiters and graduate school representatives will be on campus to discuss job opportunities and academic programs on the date indicated. Students interested in meeting with the organizations should sign up for appointments at the Career Planning and Placement office in 211 Hanes Hall. The office also offers information about summer and full-time employment. Monday, Nov. 29 E. I. duPont de Nemours and Co., Inc. Georgetown University Law Center Tuesday, Nov. 30 Clairol, Inc. Wednesday, Dec. 1 TRW Systems Thursday, Dec. 2 General Electric Monday, Dec. 6 University of Pittsburgh Thursday, Jan. 13, 1977 Guilford County Schools ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS THOUSANDS ON FILE Stnd $1 .00 for your up-to-date, 192-pag. mail order catalog. 1 1926 Santa Monica Blvd. Los Angelas. Ca. 90025 Original research also available. Enclosed is 11 .00. Please rush the catalog to: Name Addcsss City State . The bally Tar Heal la published by the Unlvartlty of North Carolina Media Board; dally except Sunday, exam periods, vacations, and summer ions. The following dates are to be the only Saturday issues: September 18. Oct. 16, Oct. 23, Nov. 13, Nov. 20. Offices are at the Student Union Building, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 633 0245. 933-0246; Business, Circulation, Advertising, -933-1163. Subscription rates: $25 per year; $12.50 per semester. The Campus Governing Council shall have 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 Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise or turn away copy it considers objectionable. The Dally Tar Heel will not consider adjustment or paymenta for any typographical errors or erroneous insertion unless notice Is given to the Business Manager within (a) one day after the advertisement appears, within (1) day of receiving the tear sheets or subscription of the paper. The Dally Tar Heel will not be responsible for more than one Incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduled to run several times. Notice for such correction must be given before the next insertion. Vefna Taylor Business Mgr. 1 V 22, 1976 Compiled by outside the 'DTH' offices in the will run at least twice. Ten ley Ayers to a resume workshop, featuring Elizabeth Burris from the Career and Placement Center at 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 22, in 1A Swain Hall. Sponsored by the CWB. Ronald Lee, of the Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan, will speak to all interested persons on the topic "Fertility, residential, business and industrial customers pay the same rate per KWH. According to a pamphlet issued by Carolina Action, residential electricity customers in North Carolina now pay an average rate of 3 cents per KWH, as compared to 2.7 cents per KWH for commercial customers and 2 cents per KWH for industrial customers. . Under the proposed Fair Share rates, everyone would pay 2.5 cents per KWH after the first 500 KWH's. The People's Alliance, a statewide organization involved in a number of work place community issues, sponsored a public meeting in Chapel Hill last week with state legislators to discuss utility rate reform. Approximately 80 local residents attended, and a majority endorsed the Lifeline and Fair Share proposals. In addition, local residents were informed that electricity rates will skyrocket in the Chapel Hill area next year when Duke UNC this week, up in Hanes Hall Monday, Jan. 17 Bankers Trust Co. Stanley County Board of Education Progressive Insurance Co. Tuesday, Jan. 18 Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. 1 raiiiuui iu9i 101 iswys 2nd Basel Pinbatl I 2nd Bast o Lowest Beer Prices in the World Come See to Believe Across from Blimpie's FREE KEG O' BEER TONIGHT from 7 p.m.! . All you can drink (until the keg's' empty) with purchase of any . sandwich. :SSsg&.G3S3 1K1 0MSMOUS i8l e. Rosemary n . 7 TAKE OUT! CALL is S L Cbjge Cote Trade-mark CWlffk' m!07) everything cUTBGSQS HOURS Mon. - Wed. 8 a.m. - 10 p.m Thurs. - Sat. 8 a.m. - 2 a.m. Sun. 1 1 a.m. - 8 p.m. Age Structure and Income in the United States since 1947" at 4 p.m. Monday, Nov. 22, in T-7 Carroll Hall. Montessori Children's House of Durham Preschool will open in January. Accepting Children from 2'$ years old to 4 years old. A general information meeting with a slide presentation will be held at 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 22, at Grace Lutheran Church, 824 Buchanan Blvd., Durham. The NCSL Executive Reform Bill Committee will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 22 in Room 2 1 3 of the Carolina Union. Dr. Beyle will be present to discuss course plans. All who intend to take the class for credit should attend. pricing plans Power Co. takes over the area's electric system. The UNC Board of Trustees voted in spring of 1976 to sell the University-owned electric system to Duke Power for $15 million. The electric system serves Chapel Hill, Carrboro and parts of Orange Co. According to statistics issued by the People's Alliance, an all-electric residence (which pays the lowest rate per KWH, pays $22.97 for 1000 KWH's under the UNC system and $33.64 under the Duke Power system. A residence without electric water or space heating (which pays the highest rate per KWH) pays $25.89 for 1000 KWH's under the UNC system and $40.1 1 under the Duke Power system. However, UNC Utilities Director Grey Culbreth warned that the People's Alliance figures may be inaccurate because they are computed without regard to fuel adjustment rates. Duke Power has a lower fuel adjustment rate than UNC, and consequently the gap between Duke Power and UNC's rates would be smaller. Culbreth estimated the average rate increase will be approximately 15 per cent when Duke Power takes over the system. The People's Alliance is also concerned with the consistency with which Duke Power Co. has been granted rate increases by the State Utilities Commission. Ted Outwater, a spokesperson for the People's Alliance, said Duke Power has been granted 82.6 per cent of their requested rate increases since 1971. Outwater also said that industrial use of Duke Power greatly outnumbers residential use. For example, in 1975 Duke Power sold 16.7 million KWH's of electricity for industrial use compared with 10.8 million KWH's for residential use. Books to take to Gramma's House . . .To read while the Turkey gets ready. ...To read while the Turkey rests (you won't be able to move anyway. Remember?) ...To read while everybody else is watching football. 250 to $2.00 The Old Dook Corner 137 A EAST ROSEMARY STREET OPPOSITE NCNB PLAZA CHAPEL HILL, N.C. 27514 in eleven snackbars on campus. . A , mce Frederick P. Brooks, Jr., Kenan professor and chairperson ot the Computer Science Dept., will speak on "An Overview of Micrometer Architecture and Software" at 4 p.m. Monday, Nov. 22, in 265 Phillips Hall. Refreshments will be served in the New West lounge after the colloquium. The Department of Statistics presents M.C. Bark to speak on "The Kriging Technique in Geostatistics." The colloquium will be held at 4 p.m. Monday, Nov. 22, in 247 Phillips Hall. Refreshments will be served at 3:30 p.m. in 316 Phillips Hall. You are cordially invited to attend. There will be no Carolina Forum meeting Tuesday, Nov. 23. "I am the one so many seek and so few find" Avatar Meher Baba. Join us at 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 22 and every Monday night at 105'$ N. Columbia Street. Upcoming Events Gary Sage organizer of N.C. Socialist Workers Party will speak on: "Why the Soviet Union is not Socialist" at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 23, in Room 205 of the Carolina Union. BSM James Actions Committee (JAC) will have a dinner meeting at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 23, in the famous Pine Room Cafeteria. Items of Interest Apartment dwellers speak now or forever hold your peace. The Student Consumer Action Union is now revising its guide to apartment rental in Chapel Hill Carrboro, The Southern Part of Heaven? Recommendations and complaints regarding local apartments are welcome and should be directed to SCAU in Suite B of the Carolina Union (telephone: 933-8313966-1511). This is the week of the Big Four Tournament in Greensboro. The UNC-N.C. State game starts at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 26, and the Duke-Wake Forest game starts at 9 p.m. The winners will meet at 9 p.m. Saturday, and the consolation game will be at 7 p.m. Support the Tar Heels! UNICEF Christmas Cards and Calendars are on sale now. Sales are from 11:30 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. each Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in Room 104 of the UNC "Y" Building. Sales will continue through the International Handicrafts Bazaar Dec. 3 through Dec. 5. Indulge in some excitement before Christmas sign up at the YMCA to participate in the International Bazaar Coffeehouse taking place Dec. 3 through Dec. 5. Waitresses, waiters and entertainers are needed. All persons interested in working on the SALES committee of the International Handicraft Bazaar, Dec. 3 through Dec. 5. Sign up now until Thanksgiving in the downstairs lobby of the Y. in rZSl 6800 Glenwood Ave., Raleigh, N.C. PHONE: 781 -601 7 'OUSSasOSf- L , . 1 If SANKYO DOLBY CASSETTE TAPE DECK WITH TOTAL AUTOMATIC SHUT-OFF LIST $169.95 DIXIE 3 Tnwiar Beginning Monday master diargej Carrboro voters to decide street improvements bond . by Chip Pearsall Staff Writer Carrboro voters will go to the polls Tuesday, Nov. 30, to decide whether the town government will issue a bond providing $1 million for street improvements. Carrboro Alderman Robert Drakeford said Sunday that student vote in the bond election will be a major factor. Repairs to 30 to 35 Carrboro streets could begin by February or March, 1977 if the bond election passes. S.eyenty per cent of Carrboro s population consists of students. "Student apathy on this could kill the bond decision," Drakeford said. "The street improvements are vitally needed by the town." Drakeford said Sunday that most streets in Carrboro are substandard. "Some streets will be repaved, and others will be completely rebuilt with curbing and guttering if the bond election passes," Drakeford said. "In years past, there have not been sufficient funds for building and maintaining streets. As a result, many of our streets need improvement." Drakeford said that the condition of the streets in Carrboro was a major factor in the defeat of the bond referendum last year. Drakeford said that if the bond referendum passes, every homeowner in Carrboro will have the option of voting whether or not to pave his street. The improvements will be made to streets if 51 per cent of property owners with frontage on the street vote for improvements. The bond will be financed by taxes on the basis of street front property. Drakeford said that a rate of up to $1 1 per foot of property fronting the street will be charged to owners for the improvements. The charges assessed to property owners represent approximately 70 per cent of the cost of the bond. State and city revenues will Jrl WAREHOUSERS PIEJ .flBS.,CJBBB gB V80- satisfaction LIST $137.80 DIXIE iw PRECOR SOLID STATE AMFM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO WITH SLEEP SWITCH "K 9 LIST $49.95 LAY AWAY NOW for XMAS! . .-. This Week's Special Mon.: Two Hot Dogs, French Fries and Tea $1.10 Tues.: Hamburger, French Fries, and Tea 690 Wed.: Cheeseburger, Fries, Tea 790 Thurs.: Grilled Cheese Sandwich, French Fries 690 Fri., Sat., Sun. Two pieces of Chicken, French Fries, Roll, Tea $1.20 Happy Hour Mon. -Sun. 3-6 moininc 30 oer cent tmance mc w "Property owners assessed for street improvements will have from five to eight years to pay for the improvements with an interest rate of six per cent " Drakeford said. He said that the additional property value caused by street improvements would help compensate . for the initial expenditure through future taxes. "The Carrboro Board ot Aldermen feels that this is the only way that we can realistically go in getting our streets repaired," Drakeford said. The board voted unanimously to hold the street bond election. The board has held meetings during the past two weeks to hear citizens' views on the street bond election. Some Carrboro residents have questioned the assessment method of financing the bond. f A 1 Don Peninger, a iormer town ooard member, said that he thinks the board and town employees should examine alternate methods of funding. He suggested revenue sharing funds provided by the federal government. "I'm a little worried about the assessment method that would be employed by the town if the bond passes as it stands now," Peninger said. "I know a lot of municipal governments use the assessment method, but there are elderly people on fixed incomes in Carrboro that might be adversely affected if this particular method is used. I've said so at the two meetings that have been held." Ford on AII-ACC UNC guard Phil Ford was named to the first team, and teammates Walter Davis and Tommy LaGarde were selected for the second team of the All-Atlantic Coast Conference preseason basketball team chosen last week. Who Is Dixie? For over 15 years Dixie has been part of one of the largest audio mail order houses in the country. We are an over-the-counter type of selling operation our equipment comes to you in factory sealed cartons, with full manufacturers warranty. .We don't deal with seconds, rejects, or repairs & we guarantee your w n It: m. BIC BELT-DRIVEN S I NG LE PLAY CO M PLETE TURNTABLE PACKAGE WITH PROGRAMMED PLAY, BALANCED TONE ARM, DAMPED CUEING DIXIE -ar "ilwiM 1" s p.m. 12 oz. Drafts 350 FRANKLIN ST.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 22, 1976, edition 1
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