Extra voltage has no Copy "Out of order" signs were common sights last year on copy machines located in campus libraries. Garden State Copy Co., the New Jersey based firm that owns the copy machines, blamed the problem on insufficient voltage. Sam Boone, director of interlibrary service, promptly directed the physical plant to install new lines to the machines in the library, at a cost to the University of approximately $300. But despite the extra voltage, the problem of conked-out copy machines persists. Boone said complaints about inoperative machines and machines producing illegible copies have already started coming in to his office. Garden State, Boone said last week, has not provided the quality of service needed in a University situation. The problem, he explained, is that the Garden State machines cannot handle the volume required of them. mi anyone cart j camarLaMa wJiliv. oren6 of Chapel Hill on franklin St next lo Vine Veterinary Phone Hours 10-6 Mon. 10-5 Sat. !.' Fri. Chris Walsh, Engineering "It's boring to read the way most people are taught. This way, you look at a page of print you see the whole page. It's great!" effect machines still "The biggest trouble is that the machines become inoperative . too quickly after servicing," Boone said. "A service man will come and clean the machines, and in about an hour they will be out of service again." Garden State plans to install a new mechanism in the machines so they will produce cleaner copies of original material with fewer breakdowns, said William Hatter, Garden State district manager. The new mechanism opens the space between the two rollers through which paper flows. In the machines now in use, this space is so small that it becomes clogged with carbon, the agent which reproduces characters on a page, and inhibits the flow of paper. Hatter explained. It is this build up of carbon that creates the dark backgrourd on copies. Hatter said the new mechanisms should be installed by the beginning of the next year. Earlier this year. Garden State said the improvements would be made in April. Boone said he hoped the new mechanisms would satisfy the students' needs. Hatter said negligent use by students contributes to some of the problems with the Tomorrow Night JOEY GEORGE Lifesong Recording Artist 405 W. Rosemary St. 967-9053 Overwhelming!That's special. Try us tonight! food and service. Tonight Only! ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT $1.95 - TUESDAY NIGHT Served with Toasted French Bread ''""""X 3 ' . Ihmi.J mtr j f'J JeniMalara, Student L . Jwrvt "I had C's in high school. After A fl Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics, :s X:' 1 jJSt 1 I was able to maintain an A average!' I H 1 ft y. rzrJ I - h i .j.v-K..., . "jm I - ' ' -Smiii. jSfi- llli itnw fc'.wmnM John Futch, Law Student "With 60 briefs a week, the average student takes all week to prepare for class. In an evening, I'm finished!' It'll make homework a lot easier this year. In fact, you can cut your study time almost in half with the copyrighted techniques you learn in one free lesson. We'll give you the. -incredible secrets to easy speed reading, better concentration and greater comprehension. Taught in more than 300 cities throughout the U.S. It's easy. It's fun. It works. m - Today and Tomorrow 4:00 PM or 8:00 PM Chapel Hill Holiday Inn15-501 By-Pass at Eastgate 0 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS on the blink machines. "Some students don't dose the lids on the machines." he said. "When the lids are open, it lets more light into the machine. This puts more carbon on the drum and after a while this buildup breaks the machine down." Machines in the libraries are well-suited for copying reference materials, he said, hut materials such as term papers and theses, which must be duplicated and submitted, should be duplicated at the photo-copy center in Wilson Library. Garden State Copy Co. collects all revenue from the machines and pass the University approximately six per cent for electrical costs and tloor space. Boone said. - KOBKKT THOMASON Bert Lance draws more criticism WASHINGTON (Ul'l) I lie precarious political lootinj! beneath Budget Director Hen Lance crumbled a bit more on the ce ot a week highlighted by a mid-week presidential news conference and Lance's long-awaited da in the witness chair. Presidential assistant Midge tosi.ma told a Rochester. N.Y.. television station that Lance should resign. Carter and Lance aie preoccupied with the controversy and "I believe Hert Lance should relieve the President ol this burden." she said. Senate Democratic Leader Robert Bvrd ol West Virginia called the I a nee resignation VOLUNTEERS NEEDED For Tutoring of Elementary and Junior High Students. o YMOk AJiTHE PEOPLE For more information, call 933-2333 or come by 1 02 Y-Building Campus the word for the response to We'll do our best to overwhelm Jim Crelghton, Student "It's easy. Once you know how to do it, it's super easy!" Richard St. Laurent, J Teacher "I was skeptical, but now I'm reading around 2300 words a minute. Puts you that much ahead of everyone else" M Monday 1 tA- s 1 " - , - it Kt-v M 1 Despite improvements costing the University $300, copy machines on campus con tinue to break down with an amazing frequency. One such machine, serviced by Gar den State Copy Co. of New Jersey, sits forlorn and unusable in Wilson Library. inevitable and suggested it follow his appearance I bin sday bctore a Senate panel. President Carter plans a news conlerenee Wednesday. news briefs Kidnappers captured M W ION. (I PI) Iwo suspects in the $ 1 50.0(H) kidnaping of a lennessee banker's daughter weie captured Sunday when a highway No change foreseen in drop policy Secretary of the acuity Henry C. Boren said I hursday that the I-acuity Council is not obligated to reconsider the lour-week drop period adopted in April 1976. Boren said there was no formal mention of a one-year trial period when the new policy was adopted. " I he four-week policy was adopted by the council and will continue until there is a change made," Boren said. "It remains in effect." I'hc 1-aculty Council voted last spring to send a proposal to extend the drop period to the Lducalional Policy Committee. The committee will not present its report until at least October. our last spaghetti you with the best of Phone 942-5153 1010 Hamilton Road Down'The Hill From Carmichael Auditorium Across From Glen Lennox Shopping Center iau pnuio oy Josaon I nomas patrol cruiser smashed into their station wagon soon alter the hostauc was released unharmed. Police said more than $ UK.OOOol the ranson for Annette Adams, I1), had been recovered following the arrests of Wavne Ciarrity. and Shelhv Ann Baker. 28. of Statesville. I hey were arrested at Hickory when the police cruiser sped into a motel parking lot and rammed their station wagon into a large trash bin. Adams was dragged screaming into a stolen car as she was leaving a Sigma Ny fraternity party on Vanderbilt University's Nashville, l enn , campus Thursday night. according to Mark Appelbaum, a committee member. I he Daily Tar Heel incorrectly reported two figures in its story Thursday on the drop policy. The number of courses dropped by students after 12 weeks under the four-week system in the fall of 1976 was not 12,176, as reported, but 11.415. Also, the total number of courses dropped by students for the entire fall 1976 semester was 11,590, not 11,549 as reported. IIP The Suspense of Lifetime 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 Held Over 4th Wk 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 RICHARD PRYOR PAM GRIER Ram Foreign Films Back! Are Francois Truffaut 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 b I INSTACOPY ' ' ' -Qualitv Copying Q Franklin & Columbia U ' S (Over the Zoom) Lr L 922147 Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Dr. William T. Kohn, Optometrist announces the moving of his office to 300 Eastowne Drive, Suite 200 Chapel Hill Opposite Blue CrossBlue Shield on the Durham Chapel Hill Blvd. Free Parking on the "D" city bus line Phone 942-4158 ' ' or 439-3304 THE Daily Crossword ACROSS 17 Certain 1 Counterpart buildings of haws 20 Maestro's 5 heart place (care) 21 Noted times 10 Take - 22 Exploit (acknowl- 23 Thwacks edgeap- 25 Man from plause) Enid 14 Pres.. e.g. 27 Sit on 15 "On - and 30 Nurse's a prayer" concern: 16 Toga abbr. 31 Scoreboard entry 32 - out (get ting by) 35 Anesthetic 39 Low or high 41 Discard 43 Deputy 44 Islet 46 Initiated, in a way 48 Piscatorial feature 49 Biped 51 Instructed 53 Humorous 56 Honshu port 57 A Gardner 58 Rel. of etc. 60 Source of honey 64 Large mall unit 67 Cupid 68 Batted ball 69 Show-biz award 70 Victor Borge, for one Saturday's Puzzle Solved: TfTTITj TTfMTTT TfiT n TIT "a"n TTtT TT1T rjr h tstm giTA ?i A 0 K N T T DfTB T W A R E TTJ.7 tTnTTjI7a' s .u R sjaTn l IT rTAc7psTuiot3"'r""E aTnTg l e 3IplfiilH roj" aiajl'a 1111 5Elii llll P I E I W I S LJ P I R 1 A I V I S LI B j E I N 1 T i h h k r-is ii i; h V) r im in iu iu jj . T5 77 iff" " "" 23 zTT Is 52T Lp-i 53 L-1 7i 32 33 3 i 35 39 So""Ti 2 """55 n cr ft i2 57-1 r-1$ kf Hsu lr ir .r 57 "rs 73 71 p I ' I d ! ' ' fc i. I I I I September 12. 1977 The Daily Tar Heel 3 Bus service agreement not reached Chapel Hill and UNC officials discussed the University's contract w ith the town for bus service Thursday but left the meeting without a signed agreement. John Temple. UNC vice chancellor for business and finance, said his meeting with Chapel Hill Town Manager Kurt Jcnne was very productive. He said he hopes to reach some agreement with the town concerning the University's level of funding of the transit system in a meeting with Jenne this week. The l'niersity had previously consented to pay $400,000. including $3.1.000 earmarked for the C'arrboro route, for transit service under a contract offered in July. However, Temple said last week Chapel Hill's final contract proposal differs from its original offer. The contract ' has remained unsigned because it included no fixed-route night service as u part of the transit system, the vice chancellor said. I he town has replaced fixed-route night service with a shared-ride taxi service that runs from 7 p.m. to midnight within a quarter-mile of any point on the bus route except Carrboro and the campus core. Temple has indicated the U niversity prefers the existence of some fixed-route service. "We still have some concerns about the evening service." Temple said alter the Thursday meeting. "But we expect to solve our problems." Temple said the town will provide statistics concerning the taxi serviceata meetingthisweek. " Their (the town's) feeling is the shared-ride taxi service is an improvement over last year's aervicc. Next week they will provide ridership figures to show how effective it is." The director of the Chapel Hill Transportation Department. Bob Godding, told the town transportation board last week that response to the new project has been slow. He said the service is handling an average of 40 riders daily, compared with the 1W riders who used the fixed-route service at night last fall. Response to the project has increased steadily since its initiation, he added. Godding said the town hopes to promote the service in an advertising campaign later this month. - ELLIOTT POTTER ?2 ORCA-THI ONLY ANIMAL WHO KILLS FOR RIVINOI. MCHARD HARMS Wildl M COLOR J "A CELEBRATION AND A JOYOUS ONE MAGICAL AND BLESSEDLY FUNNY.' -Jay Cacki, turn MagaiUM JHi COLOR 7 6 JNCNI flA. HOitMA 1 7H14 J by William Newland 71 72 Access Scanned 26 Numerical prefix 27 Spanish miss 28 Resign 29 Ruin 33 Initials of the 30s 34 Stares 36 Sound equipment DOWN Hoard Montreal athlete Mar garet Penman Places to loll Bedazzle Lianas 'acte Horrified Indonesian islands Crew member Quite plump River of Germany Shiny fabric " Mio" Reporter's query 37 Miss Adams 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 18 19 24 38 Tear 40 Sailor's saint 42 Bookish attitude 45 Optical device 47 Seawalls 50 Vex 52 Ingredient 53 Dulled by excess 54 barrel (at a dis advantage) 55 Table fowl 56 Aromatic, old style 59 African ruler 61 Soliloquy words 62 Oratorio song 63 Hollow stem 65 Enzyme 66 Chronicles name o c D C . w i z z i ll 2 o 5? 2$

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