I t 2 The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday, October campus Compiled by Jodi Bishop Public service announcement! mutt be turned in to the box outside the DTH offices in the Union by 1 00 p m if they are to run the next day Each item will run at least twice. ACTIVITIES TODAY Tht International Folk Dancers will mtti at 7 p m at the Studtnt Center of the University Presbyterian Church. "Orifsnt" (Serbian). "Ki Hivshiloo Eihkolot"(liraeli). and "Jack's Magjot" (English) will be taught. All itudenti ire invited. ECOt will present a one-hour videotape of Amory Lovins. recorded Sept. 26. at 7 )0 p.m. in 20I Bingham Hall Everyone is welcome, especially those who missed the original preientstion. Also, a general discussion of ongoing projects will be on the agenda The Student Speech Communications Association will hold a brief meeting for elections at 7 p.m. in 106 Bingham Hall. The Graduate History Society presents Prof. George Makdisi of the University of Pennsylvania who will speak on "Medieval Education A Compai ison of Institutions in Islam and the West" at 8 p m. in the Dey Hall Lounge. The public is invited to attend. lima Club presents an introductory lecture entitled "Enlightenment Through the TM Program ' at I and 7:30 p.m. in Room 215, Carolina Union. A preparatory lecture will be held at 7:30 Thursday in the same location. Everyone is welcome. Career Planning and Placement is offering a fret workshop on Resume Design at 3 p.m. in 108 Hints Hall. UNC Common Cause will meet at 7 30 p m in Room 203, Carolina Union. Fall projects and chapter organisation will be discussed. All are welcome. The Wednesday Blbls Study of St John's MCC, Rsleigh. will be held at 8 p m. in Kaleigh. For meeting place or transportation call 929-8843 or 7-926. A French Dinner will be held at 3 30 at the Render-Vous Restaurant on East Franklin Street. For all old girl scouts: An organizational meeting of Campus Gold will be held at 7 p m. in Room 204. Carolina Union. Come prepared with old songs, new ideas and lots of energy. Call 933 1704 or 942-7237 for more information. The UNC Tennle Club will meet at 6 30 p m in Room 206. Carolina Union. The Friday mined doubles wiil be discussed Any persons interested in joining and becoming paid, participating members are invited. The O arm en table will meet at 10 p m. at Hoagies Heroes. All German speakers are welcome. The NC Coastal Club will meet at 7 p m in Deep Jonah Plans for coastal field trips will be finalized. An inlormal get-together for Social Work Graduate Students will be held this evening at the Sidetrack The Department of English and the Graduate English Club announce a poetry reading by the Irish poet Eilean NiChuilleanain at 4 p.m. in 223 Greenlaw Hall. Ni Chuilleanain. a lecturer at Trinity College. Dublin, a appearing by special arringemcm with her American publiiher. Wake Forest University Press. The public is cordially invited to attend A UNC Short Course, "Disk Data Set Usage," will be held at 3 pit in 228 Phillips Hall. An IRSS Short Course. Polyvrl, will be held at 2 p m in 209 Manning Hall. An IRSS Short Course. SAS (Seaalon 2) will be held at 7:30 p.m. in 307 Manning Hall. PI Seta Phi is pleased to invite the public to a sale of handwesving and crafts from 1 1 a m to 3 p m. on Hillsborough Street Funds raised will benefit mountain craftsmen and help support the Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts. Unhreretty Dey, the annual ceremony commemorating the anniversary of the 1793 living of the cornerstone of the East Building will be celebrated in a public convocation at 1 1 a.m. in Memorial Hall. Cerl N. Schrump, a former POW. will speak at 8 p m in the second floor lounge ol Granville West. A reception will follow. The Sodeded Hlepenlce Carollnesa will have a tertulia to celebrate "El Dia de la Ran" at S p m at He's Not Here on the village green. All are invited. The Schtttx Movie Orgy, pan of the Beat Stale Extravaganza presented by Prlta Epulon fraternity. Schhtz and the Union Cohen charges local Democrats with scare tactics By DAVID STACKS Staff Writer A group of conservative Orange County Democrats has used "scare tactics" in attempting to prevent UNC students from registering to vote in Orange County, a Democratic party official said in a letter to the editor of the Daily Tar Heel today. "1 guess if some people can't w in w ith the truth, they start making things up," Gerry Cohen, voter registration chairperson for the Orange County Democratic party, said in the letter. "They (members of the Orange Committee) are trying to tell some students that if they register to vote in Orange County, their parents will not be able to list them as a tax deduction," Cohen said. "This is a total falsehood," he said. The Orange Committee is the group of SG plans Oct. 25 forum on 1-40 The UNC Student Government will sponsor a public forum on the Interstate 40 corridor planned to run through Orange County at 9:30 p.m. Oct. 25 in Hamilton Hall. Tentatively agreeing to speak at the forum arc. Dr. Joseph Straley "of the UNC physics and astronomy department; B. B. Olive, coordinator of Orange County opposition to the highway; Don Cox, a member of the local coalition fighting the planned corridor; Dr. Robert Bonar; and State Highway Administrator Billy Rose. Straley will speak on the highway's likely impact on the energy crisis, Olive on various issues the coalition has been bringing before the public, Cox on the impact on the area's water supply, and Bonar on the highway's effect on Orange County planning. Rose will present the state Department of Transportation's side of the story. All of the speakers except Rose are against the 128 E. Franklin Street Next to Yogurt Barn Downtown Bar Phone: 929-8276 Deli Phone: 929 - Coming Friday and Saturday LOAFERS GLORY, (Southern Rock) MAD 'HATTER AMU Wmm GALLERY 12. 1977 calendar - Recreation Committee, will be held ai 7 p m, in the Great Hall. Carolina Union. Interested members of the North Carolina Student Legislature are asked to attend a workshop on parliamentary procedures and constitutional amendments at noon in Room 202. Carolina Union. Eckenkav, Emerald Stale Sataang Society, will hold an open discussion group at 7:30 p.m. in Room 206, Carolina Union. The discussion is open to alt interested individuals. The Flret Collegiate Baeemeaters will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Seminar Room of Hinton James Dorm. Tournament site, date, and time will be discussed. Anyone interested in fishing is welcome to attend The UNC Selling Club will have a meeting at 7 30 p.m. in the South Gallery Meeting Room, Carolina Union. This meeting is only for those students who wish to help with or sail in the Duke Regatta on Saturday Drivers to Kerr l ake are also needed. UPCOMING EVENTS A meeting of the Carolina Indian Circle will be held at 7:30 pin Thursday in the V-Building Elections will be held. The UNC Water Pok) Club will play Thursday night at Duke. All players are asked to meet at the pool at 5: 30. Anyone is welcome. The gay rep group sponsored by Raleigh MCC will meet ai 8 p m. Thursday in Raleigh. For meeting place or information call 929-8843 or 832-1582. A meeting of the 1(71 Walk lor Humanity Organizing Committee will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Campus Y Building. Everyone interested in the walk should attend For more information call ttk Campus V Office. The International Center Coffee Hour will feature a slide show on Gottingen, West Germany, at 3 p.m. Thursday in the International Center in Bynum Hall. German pastries and coffee will be served. A free reading period for Caroline Reedere will be held at 7:30 p m. Thursday in 103 Bingham Hall. Please bring a reading of no more than three minutes that you would be comfortable sharing with the group. Triangle Area Coalition of the Mobilization for Survival, an anti-nuclear power, nuclear weapons group will meet Thursday in the Durham Friends Meeting House at 404 Alexander Ave For more information call 929-9962 or 967-7244. Everyone is welcome. Mature adult students will meet at 8 p m Thursday in Room 202-204 Carolina Union. All students whoare35or older are urged to attend. William Spencer, coordinator for the National Academy lor Peace and Conflict Resolution Campaign, will ipeak at 8 p m Thursday in Gerrard Hill. His talk will be open to the public and will be sponsored by the Curriculum in Peace, War and Defense. A Young Socialist Forum on the topic of "Socialism and Democracy" will be held at 7:30 p m. Thursday in the South Gallery Meeting Room of the Carolina Union. Gary Sage of the Raleigh Socialist Workers Party will make the presentation at the forum, which is sponsored by the UNCYoung Socialist Alliance. Emy Reeves will be performing in Deep Jonah at 8 p m Thursday. Hot apple cider and other refreshments will be sold Bring your own beer or wine. No cover charge. The Beat State Extravaganza, a day of fun. is scheduled for 2 30 to II p m. Thursday on Carmichael Field. The Drifters band will hold an outdoor concert, pep rally, and the Carolina Olvmpics will be held. All proceeds go to the American Cancer Society. TOPIC, a new campus speaker scries designed with the graduate student in mind will present its fust speaker, Terry Maddox of the Graduate Fellowship Office, at 8 pm Ihursday in the Green Room of Craige Residence Hall Maddox will speak on "Where the Money Is." Daphne Athae will read from a forthcoming novel at 8 p m. Thursdsy in 300 New West. All are wrlcome. The UNC Juggler Association will meet at 4 p.m. Thursday by the Old Well Beginners are welcome. Everyone is welcome to attend the Chrletlen Science politically active Democrats from northern Orange County that unsuccessfully petitioned the N.C. Board of Elections last spring, asking that the names of 2,000 UNC students be purged from voter registration books. The Orange Committee said a student should not be allowed to register to vote until he has established his intent to live in the county after graduation. Orange Committee member Bill Ray confirmed that the group uses the tax exemption argument Cohen addresses in his letter. But Ray denied any knowledge of committee members app oaching students or their parents about the possible tax exemption. "If a student's parents claim him as a deduction, the student is supposed to have a domicile at his parents' home," Ray said. "We have been told by someone in authority that this is the case." highway project, but will present dtlferent views. "I don't want it to be a pro-con forum," said Mark Payne, a Student Government executive assistant and a member of the 1-40 coalition opposed to the highway. "I want it to be a public information forum." Payne explained that the forum's structure would be informal with each of the five speakers allowed to make a presentation before the forum is opened to questions from the public. Payne added that he is hoping to find someone to speak on the highway's possible effects on Duke Forest. A slide presentation of the area where the corridor will run also is possible, he said. Student Government may also initiate petitions and letter-writing campaigns on behalf of the 1-40 opposition. - MARK ANDREWS Open Every Day 1 pm 2 am 3824 Look Who's Playing: Wednesday Night formerly members of Workshoppe. featuring: Hisa Station Organization meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday in the South Gallery Meeting Room Carolina Union. Effective healing prayer will he the subject of the meeting. Prof Peter A W l ewis from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey. Calif ., will speak on Models for Poaltlve-Valued and Discrete Tame Serle at 3 p ut Friday in 234 Phillips Hall All are invited. A coflee hour will be held from 2;.10to 3 p.m. in 102 Phillips Annex. Sonehlne, Christian M usic with a difference, will be presented by the Cornerstone Coffeehouse at 8 p m Friday, in the Catholic Church of St. Thomas More. The Grad Brothers of Omega Pal Phi Fraternity, Inc., will sponsor the October Affair 77 at 9 p.m. Friday in Great Hall, Carolina Union Music for this exclusive night is provided by "Liquid Pleasure." Tickets are $1.50 at the door. WXYC, 89.3 FM, is sponsoring a Bluegraee Festival from 5 to midnight Saturday at the Forest 1 heaire 1 ickets are on sale at the Carolina Union Desk for SI. The Pleymakere Repertory Company (PRC) preaenta Peter Shatler'e play Equui Oct. 13 through 30 at H p m on 1 ucsdays and Saturdays and at 2 p.m. Sunday. Extra performances have also been added at 8 p m. on Sunday. Oct 23. at 2 p.m. on Wednesday. Oct 26. For more information call the box office at 933-1 121. ITEMS OF INTEREST The deadline for entries lor the fall issue of the Cellar Door is Saturday, Oct 15. Poems, short stories and graphics can be submitted to cither Box 22 at the Union Desk or the Cellar Door Office. 205 Y Building . The Chapel Hill Parka and Recreation Department is in need of coaches for its girls basketball league Anyone interested in workingwithyounggirlslparents.sludents.etc lis welcome to help out. For further information contact Cindy Solic at 929-1111, ext. 210. Free portraits for the 1978 Yackety Yeck will be taken by Stevens Studios Oct. 24 through Nov 4 All students should make appointments any weekday at the U nion between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., at the Y-Court between 9 a.m. and I pm. or by calling 933-1259 between I and 5 p.m. AHPAT (Allied Health Professions Admission Test) applications must be received in New York City on Oct. 22 (allow one week for delivery). Students applying to transler into the physical therapy program at ECU need this test tor admission consideration Applications may be obtained in 101 Nash Hall. The Reference Servlcea Staff at the Health Sciences Library is now offering short classes twice a month on using the library effectively and on inlormation sources in specific fields. These seminars will be held every second and lourth Tuesday of the month from 9 to 1 1 am in the History Room (second floor of the library) and the schedule lor the remainder ol 1977 follows. Class size for each session is limited: therefore, leiervations should be made in advance. Centurlng-Venturlng: A Planning Proceaa for Creatively Muddling Through Llle and Work is a free mini-course on career and life planning offered by the Career Planning and Placement Office. Students interested in participating can call Jane Kendall at 933-6507 or come by 21 1 Hanes Hall. Chapel Hill and surrounding area businesses are invited to participate in the thud annual Home and Garden Show at Northgate Mall. Feb. 23 through Feb 25 1 hose individuals wishing to take part should contact Glenn Gravilt. show chairperson, at 222 Northgate Mall. Durham.no later IhanOct. 15. The State-North Carolina Football Game may be sold out. but you still have a chance to go. Members of the Toronto Eachange are selling chances for 50 cents, and the lucks winners will get tickets as well as a case of Coors hecr. The drawing will he held at noon on Thursday in the pit. hut you need not be present to win. The first annual Carolina AFROTC Paper Airplane Conleat is coming Oct. 14 Look for it. The Chapel Hill Public Library w ill h.uc 90OO books, donated b) local residents, for sale from 10 a.m to 4 p m. New groups of books will be there to choose from. The N T E. (National Teecher Exam) applications must be received in Princeton. YJ.. by Oct. 20. Registration forms are available in 103 Peahody and 101 Nash Hall. These exams are required for certification in North Carolina. Anyone interested in running for president, vice president, secretary, or treasurer of the newly formed Aaaociation of Bualneaa Students please call Paul Arne at 933-5201 soon. Elections will be heldat3'30p m. Tuesday in the third-floor faculty lounge of Old Carroll Hall. Ray refused to reveal the source of the committee's information. Ray denied knowing of Orange Committee members approaching students or their parents about the possible tax consideration. However, one UNC student has told the Daily Tar Heel that Ray himself approached her parents about the disputed tax exemption. The source, whose parents live in rural Orange County, said Ray told the students' father that the family would lose the student as a tax exemption because the student was registered at school, not in n Fayetteville as his local address for the University. Stapleton is more concerned w ith what the overwhelming publicity has done to his mother's spiritual work, however. "People are going to her now because of her connection with the President," he said. "She may have to quit for a year." He shifts around in his chair and lightly fingers the table. He is uneasy discussing his own spiritual convictions. His face reddens as he acknowledges a belief in reincarnation and extra-sensory perception. "It says in the Bible that we must be like stapleto THE Daily Crossword ACROSS Uncivilized 19 Burden 20 Too 21 Colored 22 Verbose 23 Cravats 25 Certain greens 27 Serling 30 Scottish negative 31 Byway 32 Antilles island 34 Trusted friend 38 Decamp 33 Billiard shot 41 Small amount 42 Trials 44 Beau 45 Bridge position 46 St. Lo season 48 Poetic contraction 49 Explosive 51 Solitary 53 Constella tion 54 "The best plans ..." 56 Shape 60 - me tan gere 61 Award for a chef 63 Always 64 Sword 65 Holds back 66 Dry 67 Loch - 68 Got up 1 one 6 "God's Little -" 10 Kind of rubber 14 Dress shape 15 Certain horse 16 Kind of corner 17 City of the red stick Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 1 01 J77 D r C J C T -f A P S T A N ! JLIjE'e" Jl jp HAiT a s m A T eJTjk i I T e n syi l E FT"fi 4Cjcomni t A11L T a u TE s t a r s i.JL! LJ E UliLlilji K n i a uBl h. R. o. n. 1 1 i. r R CM? S A y J E S a h. AM. c.R f r TTfn a o Li peepsctJstr1ews " 2 fi 5 P P'""o 7 IS 9 "ilO 111 112 113 TI; T? TE 2i5 -n " iT .JliMllL.lu jy-rr rj-b" p" nw29 - it "; n mmimmJ 5f : -: pr" if prhf tb JTTJ8- vi ; " iT1 1:8 rr4 V vr w nsyr C3 !CT p I 1 I 1 3 I 1 1 lJ I 1 I M Board wants By MICHAEL WADE Staff Writer The Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen voted unanimously Monday night to intervene in Southern Bell Telephone Co.'s plan to request a rate increase at a State Utilities Commission hearing Dec. 8. The resolution to intervene was proposed by Alderman Gerry Cohen, who told the board that Southern Bell should be able to show the commission that extra costs are justified. Cohen said he felt Southern Bell's request to increase the cost of turning on a phone already hooked up from $20 to $49, and of installinga new phone from $24 to $72, were not justified in Laketree developers petition for reversal of project denial Laketree developers Sylvia Rodin and Gertrude Groten filed a petition Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court asking that the Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen's denial of the project be reversed. The petition asked the court to nullify the board's decision and grant building applications to the developers. In a related development, Town Manager K urt Jenne said in a memorandum to Mayor James C. Wallace and the board that the failure of Art Berger, town development coordinator, to release a document reporting a New York civil ruling against Eugene Rodin, husband of the developer, was poor judgment. Berger withheld that document in the town's general Laketree file because he did not feel it had a bearing on the merits of the Laketree proposal, Jenne said. Berger received the document more than a Constellation bash Due to cloud cover, the Constellation Party scheduled for Tuesday night has been rescheduled for tonight at 7 at Finley Golf Course, weather permitting. the precinct where the family lives. "1 was very upset about it," the student said. "My family can't afford to lose me as a tax exempt ion." The student said Ray has known the family for several years. Evelyn Lloyd, a member of the Orange County Board ol Elections, said she had received a complaint concerning Ray's action in the matter. "1 don't know anything at all about what Ms. Lloyd said." Ray said. "But I certainly had no part in it." Continued .from, page 1. Jesus to enter heaven, and he was perfect. We keep being born again until we reach that state," he said. "It really bothers me when I hurt someone. If I have any morals, that is it. You pay for what you do in another life. "I do not like anything around my neck. If you grab my neck or pull my tie, 1 panic. After I got into this 1 met someone else who could not wear a tie at all. He found out that he had been hung in a previous life. "There is a guy in Texas that you can send your name and history to. He says he can plug into the collective consciousness and tell you about your previous lives." by Norton Rhoades DOWN 1 au rhum 2 Israeli airline 3 Islets 4 Proboscis 5 Number 6 Stir up 7 Fr. psych ologist 8 Playthings 9 Direction 10 Green des ert shrub 11 Con- 12 Understands 13 Warhol 18 Flightless bird 22' Bacchus' drink 24 - huff (angry) 26 Not on time 27 Large collection 28 Heraldic band 29 Club money 33 Something detested 34 Idiot 35 Irish 36 After tail or Water 37 Augury 39 Necessity 40 Ranging animal 43 "The - in Spain" 44 Army off. 46 Draws together 47 Fuss 49 Treasure - 60 Certain mechanic 52 Coal 53 Bills 55 War god 57 Mixture 58 Camera's eye 59 Eleanoraof the stage 61 Middle: abbr. 62 Roosevelt agency u c o c w z z t c i?o: 6 j2 . 2 1 mmmmmmmmsam Bell to justify increase Chapel H ill because of its large turnover of phones here. He said University officials had told him that the actual cost of hooking up a phone is from $12 to $15. "It seems that Southern Bell has a different accounting system," Cohen said. "I don't know what they're accounting for." "I am sure that if people have to pay $50 to get their phones turned on, there are going to be a lot less telephones." Cohen said several cities have intervened in telephone company rate-increase requests on behalf of consumers. He cited Durham's intervention in a General Telephone Co. request as a recent example. The board authorized Town Attorney Emery year ago from a lawyer in a New York civil case whose clients were trying to collect $ 1 .2 million from Rodin and others for alleged land fraud, Jenne said. The recent release of that document led to an investigation by Mayor James C. Wallace that found Rodin was sentenced to five1 years probation after pleading guilty to second degree larceny in a related New York criminal case. The proposed Laketree community would cover 387 acres in an area adjacent to U.S. 501 south of Chapel Hill. With This Coupon FREE BEVERAGE OF YOUR CHOICE with your meal I I I I Offer good this Wednesday & Thursday, October 12 & 13 only I j ALL ABC PERMITS DTH Classifieds Announcements PARENTS AND FRENDS OF UNC. Don't miss out on all the campus news. Subscribe to THE DAILY TAR HEEL this fall. DURHAM-CHAPEL HILL SKI & SPORTS CLUB kick-off meeting Monday, October 17th, 8 p.m., Royal Oaks- Apts, Clubhouse on 15-501:-Phone 942-1120 ?' '""-'V-i ', CAMPUS COPY CENTER OPENING soon! On the alley by the big rock next to the Port Hole restaurant. Watch for grand opening this month! For Rent FOR SALE GRADUATE STUDENT CQNTRACT in Craige for male or female. Call Rich 933-7114. Keep trying. For Sale UN1SON1C 799 Calculator - Has memory. Does logs, sins, cos, etc. $70. Call Debra, 933-5379 1974 Jawa C2 motorcycle less than 3000 miles. Needs new battery plus few minor repairs. Otherwise good condition. Great for around town. 967-7946 after 4:30 p.m. Help Wanted PART-TIME OPENINGS: Alcoa Aluminum has openings in Chapel Hill. From $4.00hr. to $5.00hr. to start. Apply today at the Carolina Union, room 215 at 3:10 p.m. COMPARDIES NOW OPENING UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT COMPARDIES RESTAURANT, LOCATED AT JONES FERRY AND DAVES ROAD IN NEARBY CARRBORO, WILL SOON BE REOPENING WITH A NEW NAME AND! NEW MANAGEMENT FEATURING A WIDE SELECTION OF EXCELLENT FOODS AND THE BEST IN LIVE ENTERTAINMENT. HERE IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO JOIN THE WORKING STAFF OF THIS NEW ESTABLISHMENT WHICH WILL MORE THAN LIKELY PUT CHAPEL HILL ON MOST DINING AND ENTERTAINMENT MAPS. NOW HIRING AT TOP WAGES AND OFFERING BEST BENEFITS TO BOTH FULL AND PARTTIME HELP. IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT FOR BARTENDERS COOKS, DISHWASHERS, ATTRACTIVE WAITRESSES. APPLY IN PERSON AT COMPARDIES BETWEEN 10 AM AND 3 PM MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. COMPARDIES JONES FERRY AT DAVES 942-8588 OPEN AUDITIONS before live cameras. 5 male and 2 female actors needed. Independent project associated with RTVMP Dept. Thursday, Oct. 16, 7 -to 10 p.m. Studio 1, Swain Hall. ADDRESSERS WANTED IMMEDIATELY! Work at home no experience necessary excellent pay. Write American Service, 8350 Park Lane, Suite 269, Dallas, TX 75231. WANTED: STRONG ARMED young person -$3.00 per hour. Saturday mornings or one weekday afternoon per week. Easy bicycle ride from campus. Phone 942 7076. ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS: Looking for a part-time job with good income, flexible hours, and real experience with a careeT opportunity in the business world''' Call Jim Morgan, Northwestern Mutual Life, 942 4187. penny to represent the town at the commission's public hearing in Raleigh. In other action, the board approved a request by the Delta Tau Delta fraternity to close Pickard Lane on Oct. 21 to hold an all-campus party to publicize North Campus fraternities. By a 5-4 vote, the board allowed the street closing from 5;30to 10:30 p.m. The fraternity had asked that the street be closed from 6 p.m. to I a.m. Alderman R. D. Smith questioned whether the party could be held "at a more reasonable time" since the fraternity is located in "an essentially residential neighborhood." Mayor James C. Wallace, who cast the deciding vote to pass the resolution, said the party would give the police a chance to test a new decibel meter which would be used to enforce a new noise ordinance proposed by Alderman Marvin Silver. The board will discuss that proposed ordinance at its next meeting Oct. 24. Silver told the board that the town's present noise ordinance is basically unenforceable. Under Silver's proposed ordinance, the police department would purchase two sound-level meters which would measure the intensity of any sound 75 feet from its source such as a live band. If the sound exceeds a designated level, the police department could require that the noise be reduced. Under the guidelines proposed by Silver, noise levels would be established by the board. Different levels would be established for certain times and days. Slightly higher levels of noise would probably be permitted for weekends. Police Chief Herman Stone said the proposed ordinance could be enforced more easily than the present restriction. I I i 942-5153 1010 Hamilton Rd. ChapdHtN Juit off intarMctlon of 15-501 BypaaaAHwyM (Acrou from (Mm lannoi Shopping Center) Auto Service VW PARTS & machine service for Do-it-yourselfers at lowest prices. The Bug Haus 967-7414 eveninw for information. VW GOT THE BLAHS? Tune-ups $1250 plus parts. Mufflers, clutches, shocks, : brakes, valves, rebuilds. The Bug Haua guarantees parts & labor. 967-7414 evenings for information. Lost & Found KNAPSACK FOUND. Call 929-5188, identify, and pay for this ad. Miscellaneous HESHE. Triangle Area's personalized dating service. We match to your specifications. Special student rates. Write P.O. Box 1109, Chapel Hill, NC, 27514 INSTACOPY offset printing.& quick copying while you wait. 100 satisfaction guaranteed. Check our fast service and low price on theses work. Insta-copy, corner of Franklin & Columbia (ovct the Zoom). 929 2147. COLLEGIATE RESEARCH PAPERS! Thousands on file. AO academic subjects. Send $1.00 for mail order catalog. Box 25918-Z, Los Angeles, Calif. 90025. (213) 477-8474. TORN OR DAMAGED VINYL can be repaired! Inexpensively. Revolutionary chemical process restores strength, color texture to damaged car seats and home furniture. Repairs made on location while you watch. Call today for estimates or to arrange an appointment. VINYLCRAFT, 967-6704 Personal KEEP WATCHING THIS SPACE for the "hottest" man in town. He is reaching the "ripe" age and needs to be picked. Any takers? Call 933 4603. Transportation REE WANTED for child any or all of the following times. From Odum Village to Chapel of Cross, 9 a.m. Tues., Thurs., Fri. Return to Odum Village 12 noon. Could be on bus. Will pay. Call 942-2888. TIM Dally Tar HmI It publlahad by th Dally Tar HmI Board of Dlractort of ttta Dnlvaralty ol North Carolina dally Monday through Friday during tha regular acadamle yaw aiotpt during f xam poriod, vacations and ummar aasaloni. Tha following data art to ba only Saturday Itauaa: Sapt. 17, Oct 1, , 22, No. 8. Tha S ummar Tar Hl la publlahad waakly on Thursdays dur ing tuaimar tasatons. Offlcat art at tha Frank Porter Graham Studant Union Budding, Unlvarslty ol North Carolina, Chapal HID, N.C. 27514. Ttlaphone numbara: Naws, Sports 933-024S, S33-024B, S33-0372; Buslnasa, Circulation, AdvartUtng -(33-1103, 933-02S2. Suoscrlptlon rata: by third claaa mall, $12.50 par Mmattar, $5.00 aummar only, (30.00 par yaar; by 11 claaa mail, $30.00 par tamastar, $5.00 aummar only, $05.00 par yar. Ttw Campus Govamlng Council shall hav powars lo daurmlnt tha Studanl Acttvltka Fa and to appropriate all rvnua darlvad from tha Studanl Acthtttl F (1 .1.14 of th Sludant Constitution). Th Dally Tar Hl I a studanrorganlzallon. " Th Dally Tar Hal rasams th right lo ragulata th typographical Ion ol all advartlaamanta and lo ratriaa or him away copy It conatdars obtectlonabte. Th Dally Tar Hal will not consldar adkjatmwtla or pay ment lor any typographical errors or tTonous Insaruon untess notlc Is glvwt to tha Buslrwss Managr wttttm (1) on day after th adnrtlaamanl appears, within (1) on day ol receiving the tear sheets or subscription ol the paper. The Dally Tar Heel wW not be responsible tor more than one Incorrect Insertion ol an advertisement scheduled to run severel times. Notice lor such correc tion must be given belore the neat Insertion. Veme Taylor, But! neat Dan Collins. Salei Mai . Blair Klsltsch, Advertising Manager

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