2The Daily Tar HeeiWednesday, October 1, 1980
From pag2 1
I hat goal frustrated Turner. "I didn't
come out of the group with a negative
attitude, but looking back, I feel it was
so-so," he said. "You're not going to
change everything overnight."
Williams found opposition from her
parents a problem. "Every time I went
home it was almost a family feud," she
said. VOne time we had aunts, uncles
and cousins at the house for dinner, and
I brought up my group and they all kept
advocating that there was a definite
u ' U si u gr u
w g g y
difference between blacks and whites. I
think my mother was afraid for me at
first. She grew a lot through me."
Both Turner and Williams rr.sr.tioned..
suggestions to improve this year's group.
The number of group members has been
reduced from 12 to 10, and they will be
meeting longer. This year a black
discussion group also has been created
to discuss ways of coping in a
predominantly white University.
From page 1
Bi!l Neal, owner of La Residence, said that
one of the main reasons he chose Rosemary
Strict over Franklin Street was the rental
situation.
"A small type of business can get started
here without as much overhead," he said.
"The rent on Franklin is so high that it
would be harder for me to make a living,"
said David Flower, owner of Kirkpairick's,
"Rosemary Street is where (businesses) are
going to expand to. Rosemary is getting
busier and busier.
Roy Piscitello, co-owner of Breadmen's,
said he had see a lot of change in both
Franklin Street and Rosemary Street in the
past 14 years.
"Breadmen's was an operation we could
take "over with the amount of capital we
had," Piscitello said. "On Rosemary you
have more parking and a chance to start with
something somewhat dilap;dated."
But Neal said there are some things that
make Rosemary less charming than Franklin
Street.
"The shops (on Franklin Street) are on the
street," Neal said. "This hurts Rosemary.
That's what makes Franklin
Street pedestrian usaee."
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Bunnnr. coca-cola cottli;:g co.
By KERRY BEROCIII
Staff Writer
Run-off elections for Campus
Governing Council districts 17 and 19
will be held next Wednesday, Elections
Board Chairman Gregg James said
Wednesday.
.The candidates for District 17 are
Deborah Levine and Brian Goray. In
District 19, Bill Newman, Mike Williams
and Hugh Brady will be on the ballot.
Students in districts 17 and 19 can
vote for their representatives between 11
a.m. and 5 p.m. at the Scuttlebutt, the
Y-Court, the Carolina Union, Wilson
Library, Kenan Laboratories, Rosenau
Hall or Hamilton Hall.
James said he hoped 200 students
would turn out for the CGC election.
"The turnout probably won't be more
than 200 in total," James said. "We
have signs around campus and there are
at least 200 students living in the
districts.
there's more in your
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District 17 includes Bolinwood
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Cedar Court, Colonial . Arms, Elkin
Hills, Estes Park, Lebet, Northhampton
Piaza, Northhampton Terrace, Oak
Terrace, Park West, Pine Knoll, Sue
Ann Courts, Town House, University
Gardens, Westall and the surrounding
area.
District 19 includes Camelot,
Shepherd Lane, Spring Garden and
Town Terrace.
The run-off elections for districts 17
and 19 are being held because no
candidate in either district received more
than 50 percent of the total district's
vote.
In District 17, Deborah Levin received
50 votes, Brian Goray received 31 and
Steven Casey Laizure received 17. There
were 10 write-in votes.
In District 19, 24 candidates received
one ,write-in vote each. Newman
received two write-in votes. After they
were contacted by the Elections Board,
the candidates had 24 hours to decline
their positions on the ballot. All except
three have declined.
James said his first reaction to the
number of students on the ballot from
District 19 was surprise.
"After the initial shock wore off,' I
was just worried that I would have a
ballot longer for this election than I had
for the entire mock election ballot,"
James said.
Fowler defends himself in Klan trial
GPvEENSBORO (AP) Defendant Jack Wilson Fowler denied on the
witness stand Wednesday that he ever said he had gotten his share of
communists at a confrontation last Nov. 3.
Fowler was on the stand for the second day during the trial in which five
other Kian-Nazi members are charged with first-degree murder and felonious
rioting in the deaths of five Communist Workers Party members at a "Death
to the Klan" rally in Greensboro last fall.
Roland Wayne Wood testified Tuesday morning he heard Fowler say, "I
got my share" or something like that after the shootout between the two
groups.
State price formula boosts milk prices
RALEIGH (AP) Some people take their drinks by the shot, others by the
frosty mug, but if you drink milk by the gallon, then be prepared to pay
about a nickel more next round.
Milk is still cheaper than both beer about S4.E0 a gallon and hard
spirits, but at about $2.13 a gallon, it's not quite as cheap as water.
The newest round of milk price increases at the' supermarkets began
Wednesday when farmers received a 2.6-cent-a-gallon increase for raw milk.
That increase was. set under a state pricing formula allowing quarterly
adjustments on the first day of October, January, April and July.
Penicillin may prevent infant disease
BOSTON (AP) Giving babies a shot of penicillin w ithin an hour of birth
will almost entirely prevent strep diseases, the most common infection among
newborn infants in the United States, a major study shows.
But though the results are premising, -the researchers say more tests are
needed to make sure this routine use of penicillin would not lead to even more
dangerous illnesses. '
The doctors who conducted the research on 18,738 babies found that a
quick dose of penicillin almost completely protected the infants from diseases
caused by a bacterium called Group B streptococcus.
Vi:
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