ST.
T
1
The Daily Tar Hel Monday. October 17.
OWASA
1977
Continued from page 1
The Hillsborough pipeline is
expected to do the job formerly done
by the Durham pipeline, which has
been shut dow n because of Durham's
water shortage.
Meanwhile, Chapel Hill's first week
without Durham water ' was'
highlighted by heavy area rains.
But the rains had nominal effect on
University Lake's water level. ; " :'
Unofficial rainfall estimates from
OWASA Sunday showed that .27
inches of rainfall fell over the
weekend, making a total of slightly
less than Vh inches of rainfall in the
last nine days. : -
But University Lake has risen only
Vi-inch in the past week. OWASA
reported that the lake was 64 inches
below full Sunday. The lake was 64,
inches below full the previous Sunday.
In other OWASA action Thursday,
a water surcharge to pay for previous
Durham water purchases was
approved.
A 25-cent surcharge on every 1,000
gallons of water used will begin in
February and will last four months.
Durham water purchases cost
OWASA $174,000 this year. The
surcharge will pay most of the bill, and
a federal grant will pay the rest.
OWASA members Shirley
Marshall, Braxton Foushee and Ernie
Patterson opposed the surcharge,,
contending that other funds could
cover the water purchases. Billingsley,
however, said OWASA's funds,
drained by the water shortage, could
not cover the purchases.
OWASA also learned that
surveying for the proposed Cane
Creek reservoir would begin today
and would be completed in a month.
The Cane Creek Conservation
Authority, a group of landowners
whose land would be included in the
proposed reservoir, have a petition
before the N.C. Supreme Court to
review a lower court order permitting
the survey.
i - , - - v
. i Js, ,
gv : : t-;: i'ta
I " "
I A
I. if I
Wednesday was University Day
commemorating the 184th
anniversary of the University of
North Carolina. But this little
fellow probably disn't realize what
all the excitement was about. He
just liked the band's music as it
went by. Staff photo by Allen
jtjimyan.
5 L-
iea Dept qers new area programs
The Chapel Hill Recreation
Department will sponsor a
number of activities this month
that will be open to UNC
: st udents'.
Programs include men's and
women's basketball, co-ed
volleyball and a variety of
outdoor and nature programs.
Men's basketball consists of
three leagues semi-pro, pro
and slow break.
The semi-pro league is open to
anyone over 18, excluding ex
Carolina players. The pro league
is open to ex-Carolina players as
well. Both leagues are limited to
six teams and a 15-player roster.
Entry fee is $120 per team.
The slow break league will be
limited to eight teams and
players over 25. Full-court
pressing or fast breaking will not
be allowed. Entry fee is $80 per
team.
Women's basketball is open to
anyone 18 or over, with a limit of
12 teams and a 15-player roster.
Entry fee is $125 per team.
Registration for all basketball
leagues will end today.
Registration is at the recreation
department in the Chapel Hill
Municipal Building between 5
p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Two volleyball leagues for
anyone 18 or over are also being
formed. Recreational volleyball
is limited to eight teams of 20
persons per team. Entry fee is
$35.
The other league, which will be
more competitive, has a limit of
eight teams with 12 persons to a
team. Entry fee is $65.
Registration for volleyball
ends Thursday. Register between
5 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. at the
recreation department.
- GEORGE SH ADROIT
Wrote
'S53
couiuy
i
Sept. 16, 1977
ma i
. , n.h And proce
hi en - , c v, rpsc J
"fashion. ; , . above to say this: store has, yo
have a, lot to
Thank, yo" .
4
SA.NFORD R. SMITH
P.S.
ia nixie Home store that
fl t ba, boys hired at the Id Dixie for wlnn.
1 was one of thU ; x inlshed school,
opened in ThomasHe
nWlP tor "
Dixit; - tTfXAS
sgg-
We at Food Town
ppreciate this confidence and
encouragement from our
customers
Ralph W. Ketncr,
PRESIDENT,
FOOD TOWN STORES, Inc.
UNC Off-Campus Credit Program
offers study trip to Great Britain
If you're looking for a new and exciting way to
spend your summer vacation, but know you're
going to have to catch up on credit hours in
summer school, the UNC Extension Division Off
Campus Credit Programs may have the answer
for you.
The Office of Off-Campus Credit Programs will
offer for the fourth consecutive year its study
travel program in Great Britain.
"The program, which takes 50 students,
combines the opportunity for these students to
earn six hours credit with the experience of living
for a sustained period of time in one of the world's
greatest cities London, England," said Gerald
Unks, professor in the School of Education and
the conceiver of the program.
Two courses are part of the program English
46 and Education 41.
English 46, "Studies in Drama," will be
instructed by Dr. Christopher Armitage,
professor in the English department, and will
focus on plays running in London at the time of
the trip.
Education 41, "The School in Society," will be
taught by Unks and will examine current issues
and trends in schooling in the United States and
Great Britain.
Unks stressed that the program was not
designed for any one major in particular.
"In no way should anyone think that the
program is just for education or any other major,"
he said.
UNC hosts forensic teams
George Mason University of Fairfax, Va., easily
topped 17 schools to win the Tar Heel Forensics
Tournament held Saturday and Sunday in Greenlaw
and Bingham halls.
Because of the obligations connected with hosting the
tournament, the UNC individual events forensics team's
participation in the tournament was limited, and the
two UNC entries who did qualify
for the finals of the 10-event
tournament did not compete in
the finals as a courtesy to the
visiting schools.
Tom Preston would have made
the finals in the impropmptu
speaking category, and Ralph
Weeks would have qualified in
the dramatic-interpretation
category.
The 17 schools also competed
in the categories of
extemporaneous speaking, after
dinner speaking, interpretation
of prose, interpretation of poetry,
informative speaking, duet
acting, persuasive speaking and
reader's theatre.
Pensacola Junior College and
Morehead State University
placed second and third in the
' '" team standings behind George
Mason.
The program begins May 13 and includes 27
days of organized travel and instruction with the
option of an additional 18 days of independent
travel for each student.
"The base price of the trip is $ 1 , 1 08.23, but the
final price varies with the time of the applicant's
final decision," Unks said. "The earlier the
decision, the more you save."
But Unks said applying early is a good idea
anyway. "The program fills rapidly and develops
long waiting lists," he said. "But usually over half
of those put on the waiting lists get to go."
Group meetings to describe the trip in greater
detail will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and
Nov. 2 in 218 Peabody Hall, but Unks said
persons interested in the program should not wait
until then to put in their applications.
U nks said he will accept applications beginning
today. Names of the 50 students selected to go will
be announced in mid-November.
MIKE COYNE
Frosh runner to carry
torch in 3-mile stretch
of women's rights relay
A UNC freshman will be running for women's rights
Thursday as she joins other women from around the
country in carrying a torch from Seneca Falls, N.Y., to
Houston, Texas.
Seneca Falls was chosen as the starting place for the
relay in honor of a women's conference which was held
in that city in 1848. The torch began its journey Sept. 29
and will be carried into Houston prior to the opening of
the International Women's Year Conference to be held
there Nov. 18-21.
Area women will carry the torch from Raleigh to
Mebane Thursday. Susan Raridon of Oak Ridge,
Tenn., a member of the UNC women's track team, will
carry the torch on a three-mile leg of the relay between
Durham and Mebane.
Following a press conference to be held at 1 1 a.m.
Thursday at Durham City Hall, persons attending the
press conference will run en masse from the city hall to
Duke Chapel. From there the torch will be handed off to
relay runners to be carried to Mebane.
Raridon said she is participating in the relay because
"I like to run, and I thought it would be kind of
interesting to be involved in a relay from New York to
Houston."
Names of individual relay runners will be placed on a
plaque and on an official declaration which will
accompany the torch. After the conference in
November, these items will be given to the Smithsonian
Institute.
Any groups wanting to run en masse are encouraged
to attend the press conference in Durham, Raridon said.
Anyone wishing to run a leg of the relay should
contact Raridon at 933-1778 or. Martha Lefevre,
coordinator of the relay in the .Durham area, at 266
3279 by Tuesday. . . :., , " . -
- RAMONA JONES
Advertise In the Dally Tar Heel
.It's no gamble
O
0
0
1
lNSTACOPY
Quality Copying
Franklin & Columbia
(Over tha Zoom)
929-2147
Mon.-Fri. 9-6
THE Daily Crossword by Martha
J. DeWitt
ACROSS
1 Political
position
5 Sink firm
ly: var.
10 Money
14 BenAdhem
15 Water wheel
16 Water: Let.
17 Having the
same effect
19 Corrode
20 Finish
21 Shopping
place
Yesterday's
22 Printing
mistakes
24 Pari-mutuel
machine
25 Golf club
26 Veer
29 Polyethyl
ene et al.
32 Umbrage
33 In all
honesty
34 Wrestling
milieu
35 The shakes
Puzzle Solved:
T T J tf 7a ft T IT ThkT
II a Hi-- - 1 iJii N
amp a e TCzjh i s TM
Ez!! G I R POD A R NTj
NOT A VllH A L Tf C H t
? T R 'oFtIS A H 0 AEJ
III 1 1 1 1 Jj2Li I . J.
3 Tt H E D YO AIR A M I S
f3 HER SOT WTO skzT-TJ
lli A " J IT I MJt O i
huc"klebek Thy f Tit h
TTTT" lTUTTFTm.mX
"m s JTo "o "Pfc 1 c fc je p
36 Religious
movement
37 Take on
38 "Bali -"
39 Pilfer
40 Smelting
residue
41 Win over
by wiles
43 Finn's '
friend
44 Llama's
locality
45 Arrests
46 Hull parts
48 Eurytus'
daughter
49 glance
(instantly)
52 Thought
.53 Tormented,
in a way
56 Circle
57 Keen
58 Meadow
mouse
59 Show ex
cessive affection
60 Feats
61
Tied '
DOWN
Modern
Israeli
diplomat
Doting
Hush upl
Prisoner
6 Archie, the
boxer
7 Relative
of sec
8 One, in Ulm
9 Fruit tree '
10 Pirate's
pet
11 Composure
12 "-for Life"
13 Morgana
18 Get - on!
23 Optimistic
24 Factual
25 Kind of
fund
26 Algerian
cavalryman
27 Cotton
fabric
28 Of similar
...value
29 Vincent of
films
30 Bill of
fare
31 Pilot
33 Relates
36 Absorbed
37 Gropes for
words
39 Bona -
40 Actress
Normand
42 Hire
43 Waldorf and
Caesar
45 Made a memo
46 Daw or dove
47 Personal:
pref.
48 The Gloomy
Dean
49 Black Sea
gulf
50 Vision or
scope
51 Arabian
settlement
54 Lemon's end
55 "-got sixpence"
II 2 p ii, F5 16 , J8 J9 I "110 III 12 II)
15 ' ts :
77 TS """"-""""T 13
53 ti srr "
- .... J - mmAmm
III r I lllMfc-sS MM MM MM 111 : MM fetel MHM M MM L "'
26 27 2T jnjr
v "TI""-""
35 7jf
IB " if ",1.6
V Iff - - --
"- ' ""r -
52 J53 jjp-
55 yi -4
u J
W jOT Ti
I 1 I I M I 1 I I M