Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 20, 1977, edition 1 / Page 4
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t 4 The Daily Tar Hr Foster parents needed in Orange County The Orange County Department of Social Services is seeking foster parents to accommodate a growing number of children who need an alternative to their present home situation. "We're beginning to have more children than we have foster homes available," Marilyn Tyroler. supervisor of Children's Services in the department, said Monday. She emphasized a need for black foster ' parents. TyToler said the department is appealing to graduate students and professors who can offer children "a physically safe place to live and a lot of love." She said several UNC graduate students and professors already arc foster parents. Foster parents receive for room and board and for the child's medical care, and the children may receive clothing and some allowance. But foster parents are not paid for keeping children, Tyroler said. A foster parent need not be married nor own a home, Tyroler said, but he must be between the ages of 21 and 60. The Department of Social Services selects the foster parents. "Most people weed themselves out without our having to do it," 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 Ends Thur 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 Ends Thur. MtMOHAEkf ITlSIOBfc HIVtltDIN IANUD trilll 1 I ShOWlK; 3:30 5.-30 7:30 9:30 WDBS-FM 107 Announces The Classics Rita Hayworth Janet Blair "Tonight and Every Night" ROD SFRI.ING A unique first adventure! ft 211 NCNIPIA. KKiMAd MtLU UVEH H NKiawaiiK SHOWS 2:15 E A different 4:00 I kind of 5:45 i love story 7:30 9:15 SHOWS 2:30 4:15 6:00 7:45 9:30 STARTS TOMORROW LATE SHOW FRI. & SAT. 11:30 CHAPEL HILL'S MOST H TOTALLY 7 K OUT OF CONTROL MOVIE 3h Kl 1 1 AM 1 1 HV IJNIII.I I It M IHMKIIMJIhlM'OMI'ANY INC R O l'77 KIM I II Ms INC il HELD OVER 2ND WEEK SHOWS 2.-00 4:30 7:00 9:30 1 porncn court mi 1 ItYA pike or 1 , ACTION I -V""r mmm FRI. & SAT. 11:30 1 SHOWSSSORRY - NO PASSES Aongomeogo in a galaxy fa, fa away.. she said Kor more information, prospective foster parents can call Tyroler in Chapel Hill at 967-8195 or Sarah West in Hillsborough at 732-2141 or 942-7200. A meeting to explain the program for prospective foster parents will be held at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 14 in the conference rooms of the Departments of Social Services in both Chapel Hill and Hillsborough. The department also is asking for filibuster donations of jeans, shirts, socks and underwear lor a family whose home burned this weekend. One girl needs clothing, sie 8 to 10, and another needs jeans with a 30-inch waist and 27-inch length. The mother wears sie 12 to 13 clothing. Donations can be made by contacting the Department of Social Services, which will arrange to pick up the clothing. - KEITH HOLLAR Continued from page V But another result of the filibuster is that it monopolizes the floor causing several important issues to be postponed. These include: The new WXYC budget. As long as the filibuster continues, the veto is still in effect, and WXYC will receive none of its appropriation. Appointments to the student Supreme Court. The court is not operating at full strength. The CGC originally was scheduled to vote on approving Bill Moss' appointment to the court, but the filibuster prevented it. Although the court currently has enough members to have a quorum, it will not operate with the five members provided for in the student constitution until the filibuster ends and a new justice can be confirmed. Student fee increase. The CGC also was scheduled to vote on a bill that would set a definite amount for the proposed student activity-fee increase. Now the project is delayed. The council also was scheduled to hear $1,725 worth of budget requests from various student organizations. Chip Cox, chairperson of the Rules and Judiciary Committee, and CGC Speaker Gordon Cureton are searching parliamentary law to see whether the filibuster can be ended. But the CGC bylaws include no procedure for cloture, and Darius Moss conceivably could continue his filibuster as long as he wishes. But more CGC members will attend the meeting Tuesday, and if the vote appears to be in favor of overriding the presidential veto, Moss may yield the floor and allow the issue to be voted on. Until then, the CGC can do nothing. - HOWARD TROXLER Hackney's has down coats Woolrich down-filled, nylon jackets for the finest cold-weather warm-up. Light weight, functional, meticulously manu factured. Machine washable. for people who play... HcufawA- University Mall Chapel Hill North Hills Raleigh HUMPHREY I DMHIIU NUMMtrr Glft&rs 6E034E PETER 10RS! MIYOM MrtCtMf - Lit MTI1CK ' tVDNtT .tTlf JOHN HUSTON-WARNER BROS. Opn Evtry 1pm 128 E. Franklin Street Next to Yogurt Barn Downtown Bar Phone: 929-8276 Dell Phone: 929-3824 Coming Friday & Saturday BRICE STREET intricate rock melodies superbly performed Beatles medley, too!, f V ?? X KM is Tonight MAYSON Rock & Roll from Macon, Georgia By ZAP BR UECKNER and GRANT HAMILL r I m if Toilet Booth Egerton Nunnally Met a Zany lately? Anyone who knows of zany happenings, unique people or other Publick Knowledge type material may submit ideas to the Publick Knowledge box outside the Daily Tar Heel office in the Carolina Union. A new-style water closet . . . Does your bathroom have a telephone in it? The brothers of Delta Upsilon fraternity have one in theirs. Five inconspicuous men walked into the Union on Tuesday and began moving a telephone booth used in the DU-sponsored Beat State stuff ing contest last week. No one stopped them, no one except DTH reporters asked them any questions. They took the booth out the doors near the Union parking lot and loaded it into their blue VW bus. "It was lunch," a DU spokesperson said. "Musta been something in the barbeque. "It's midterm relief." They pushed and shoved the booth into the van, but it still hung three feet out the side. "We wanted to put something over our toilet," the spokesperson said as he and his brothers zoomed out of the parking lot. Balancing act . . . Kim Egerton performs a balancing act almost every week at craft fairs all over North Carolina. She's not an acrobat, but a salesperson for solo boards made by her partner, Mark Thompson. A solo board is similar to a plank which rests on a tin can upon which one can balance. The "tin can," or roller, is made of wood and grooved. The board is about nine inches wide and three feet long, with a wooden track on the bottom, which fits the groove. The groove and track allow you to do tricks on the board, like 360-degree turns, Egerton said. Egerton said she sold about 30 boards in September at $20 each. Increased costs will probably raise the price to $24.95 by Christmas, she said. If you groove on balancing acts, a solo board might be for you. Sent to congress . . . L. Anne Nunnally is going to congress this January but she didn't win an election. Nunnally has been appointed to the American Medical Association (AMA) Council on Medical Education. She will speak at the council's congress in Chicago. Nunnally, a third-yer medical student, also will attend AMA meetings in December and June. She says her role at these meetings is to present the student viewpoint. Athletic facilty completion is delayed By BRIC E EIXIS Staff Writer Despite a crushing need for additional campus recreational facilities, construction of a $400,000 athletic facility on Fetzer Field has been delayed. Completion of the facility, which will replace the now defunct Tin Can. has been set back from September to January or February. "The steel structure for the building was not fabricated as specified, so we shipped it back to the manufacturer and it is being redone," said Selwyn N. Bryant, UNC director of engineering and construction in the Division of Operations and Engineering. The building should be completed by January or Fehruary depending on the weather. Bryant said. The delay in construction of the facility is further cramping the already-crowded conditions which exist in Woollen Gym, said Carl Blyth, physical education department chairperson. "Right now, the situation (in Woollen Gym) is awful," Blyth said. "We don't have enough lockers, the lacrosse team is dressing in corners, students are dressing in halls and instructors don't have enough places to teach." The men's and women's fencing teams, which practiced in the Tin Can last year, now I Drive Our Cars j ALMOST FREE I I to most U.S. cities j AUTO DRIYEAWAY j 919-2722153 I 520 W. Friendly Ave. I Greensboro, N. C. I Legal Clinic Opening 'The law firm of Winston, Coleman and Bernholz announces the opening of a Legal Clinic at 136 E. Rosemary Street (NCNB Plaza above Blimpie's), Chapel Hill, N.C.This Legal Clinic will provide routine legal services at reasonable fees. The Clinic will provide the following services: Initial Conference $15.00 The Legal Clinic charges $15 00 for an initial consultation session ol 30 minutes with an attorney. However, il the initial conference results in the utilization of one of the following legal services, there will be no charge for this conference. Uncontested Divorce $125.00 There is an additional fee of $25.00 when uncontested custody of children or uncontested division ol property is involved. $24 00 court cost & $2 00 service of process fee Separation Agreement $100.00 (Uncontested with limited assets) Adoptions (Uncontested) $75.00 $15.00 court cost Name Change $35.00 $15 00 court cost Preparation of Deeds and Notes ...$15.00 Business Conference (30 minutes). $15.00 Simple Leases, Rental Agreements and Contracts $35.00' Bankruptcies (Non-Business) $165.00 $50 00 court costs Wage Earner Plans Fee Set by Court Simple Wills $35.00 While these tees will apply in most cases, they may have to be adjusted to meet the client's individual needs Legal Clinic of Winston. Colemen, and Bernholz 136 E. Rosemary St. Chape! Hill, N.C. 929-0394 Mon.-Fri. 9 AM-5 PM, Mon.-Thurs. 7-9 PM Sat. mornings 9 AM-12 PM Every Thursday Night Blucgrass Experience 405 W. Rosemary St. 967-9053 practice in the Great Hall of the Carolina Union. The 30,000-square-l'oot facility will have a small structure outside designated for bathrooms, according to Gordon Rutherford. UNC director of facilities. Rutherford said the athletic facility will be single-spanned instead of having support posts running through its center as the Tin Can did. It will contain a track and an open playing area with a sand-asphalt floor. Blyth said he is unsure what specific equipment will be installed in the building. He does not know, for example, whether it will contain basketball courts criss-crossing the playing floor as did the Tin Can. "We're just trying to get the thing together right now," he said. "We'll worry about other details later." The details for later consideration include a formal name for the building. "It will be a multi-purpose facility used for various activities by physical education classes, athletic teams and others," Blyth said. If weather conditions prevent an athletic team from practicing outside it, it can use the new facility, he said. The Tin Can was torn down in June to provide space for the physical education and intramural building under construction beside Woollen Gym. It housed a small playing floor for various activities and a one-tenth of a mile wooden track. The Tin Can was a popular free-play facility when not occupied by physical education classes. University athletic teams or intramural squads. The new ptiysical education and intramural building and the new Fetzer Field facility, which are both under construction, should alleviate the current problems in Woollen Gym when they are completed. FANTASIES MONSTERS NIGHTMARES DAYDREAMS LJPCEIJOT I &:1 In a magnificent full color collection of paint ings, book-jacket and record-sleeve illustrations, and etch ings, one of , the world's most popular fantasy science "fiction artists offers notes and commentary on each of his works. In Mythopoeikon, Patrick Wood- roffe details the development of his fascina tion with fantastic art forms and subject obsessions, and his interest in "fantastic realism" as he studied artists such as Bosch and Dali. Mythopoeikon is a brilliant visual experience that will dazzle the eye and mind of anyone who sees it. Patrick Woodroffe $9.95 Simon and SchusterA Fireside Book The Porthole Picks the ACC. A weekly feature predicting the outcome of the week's ACC football games. "We know more about good food than we do about football!" Q RESTAURANT ) Picks: Clemson over NCSU Maryland over Duke Point Spread 6 Week of Oct. 22 Record last week: 2-2 Record overall: 24-9 Wake Forest over Virginia UNC over South Carolina Point Spread 7 9 Downtown, up the alley across from NCNB. Serving daily. 1 1:30-2:00 942-1171 4:45-7:15 . X-fcJ
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1977, edition 1
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