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Friday, October 10. 1950The Daily Tar Heel3 V From pag 1, : t Ms Goray has 48 hours from the time of the board's decision to submit his written appeal to the Supreme Court. In another dispute over the elections laws, a member of the Campus Govening Council said Thursday he also, would file suit with the Student Supreme Court if the ambiguities in the election laws' definition of residency were not resolved. District 1 representative Wayne Rackoff, said the dispute concerned Tom Lambeth. Lambeth, District 20 representative, moved from his district this fail, though he still represents it on the council. The Student Government Constitution states a CGC member must be a resident of the district he represents. But the, election bylaws state a student's residence is what is listed within the UNC Office of Records and Registration. Because Lambeth is still listed as living at his fraternity house, according to election bylaws he is technically a resident of District 20. "In my mind he does not live in his district," Rackoff said. "My interpretation is that he is improperly registered at the fraternity and the University regulations require notification.'' Rackoff said by allowing Lambeth to live outside his district, the CGC has created an imbalance in equitable district , representation. . "We don't want a situation where a student can choose where he wants to run," Rackoff said. "If we do that, then potentially, (where there are) two people in an apartment, one could represent the district he lives in and the other could represent the district of his fraternity house." , A. " Ccsllcr.3 Czzrd Chc:rmrn Qrczj J-rr.os ...decision on vote sparks dispute Lambeth said he saw the key argument of the case as the relationship between a fraternity member and the fraternity house. . If Lambeth were to resign from the council, or if the laws were changed to allow fraternity members to run for office only from the house, Rackoff said he would not file suit with the court. - ' Lambeth said he would plead his case Tuesday before the CGC Rules and Judiciary Committee. Cohey attacks Green'o policie WASHINGTON (AP) John B. Anderson will begin running his first television ads of the fall presidential campaign this week, and they will be paid for by money borrowed from his hundreds of thousands of supporters nationwide. The ads, which will emphasize Anderson's stand on various issues, are scheduled to be aired on network television using $1 million in funds being raised by an unusual direct mail appeal. Weeks ago, the independent presidential candidate's lawyers began trying to borrow between $10 million and $15 million from a group of banks in New York and Chicago. The money was to be paid back from retroactice federal funding for which Anderson will be eligible if he receives 5 percent of the vote in the Nov. 4 election. Five percent of the vote would entitle him to $3 million, with the amount going up with the size of the vote. But banks have been unwilling to commit themselves. Some money less than $3 million was promised, but only if other banks would asrce to increase Cy MARK ANCONA Staff Writer Lieutenant gubernatorial candidate J3ill Cobey attacked incumbent Jimmy Green's policies and his reluctance to meet the challenger in' a head-to-head debate in' a speech at Gerrard Hall Wednesday night. Cobey,i who served as UNC athletic director for five years, gave up the position to pursue a career in politics. , Cobey opened his speech by- predicting Republican Ronald Reagan's victory in November and promoted , the 1980 Republican Party platform. "Gov. Reagan is not only going to win the country but he will also carry the state of North Carolina," Cobey said. "However, I am very disappointed that (Green) has not consented to debate me," Cobey said. "Ninety percent of the registered voters in the state do not knpw one stand of Green's according to a survey we have conducted," Cobey added. ' Cobey criticized Green for wastefully spending ' 'taxpdycrs dollars by approving his own pay raise from $30,000 annually to $43,000, by employing a personal chauffeur at a cost of $20,000 per year and by that has risen to $220,000 this year. Cobey also said he would like to sec the office of lieutenant governor returned to part-time status. "Why can't the post be turned back to a part-time post with part-time pay? Various committees have not come up with any additional , duties for the lieutenant governor," Cobey said. "There is no reason for it being a full-time job." Cobey also criticized the administration of Gov. Jim Hunt. "State spending is taking 8 percent of all personal income. The state has to have a budget to live on like the rest of us, but economy should start at the top,' Cobey said. - Cobey also pointed out that serious crime increased last year by 12.5 percent and cited the Hunt administration as the cause. Despite his campaign efforts, Cobey's major problem is exposure throughout the state, said David Spence, Cobey's local steering committee chairman. He added that if people become more familiar with i DTHWiM Owws BI'I Cobsy returns to UNC ...optimistic about election win what Cobey stands for, the challenger would win the election. With his wife, Nancy, campaigning extensively throughout the state and the support he is gaining, Cobey claims he will be in office after Nov. 4. "Nancy is a better campaigner than I am and she is winning many votes and friends on my behalf," Cobey said. Gfaape! Mill observes lire Pre vent ion Week Cy KAREN HAYWOOD I Staff Writer t Chapel Hill Mayor Joe Nassif has proclaimed the week of Oct. 5-1 1 as Fire Prevention Week. Chapel x Hill .Fire. Marshal ?Joe RcbertsGtYbsai3 -Cstudiafs I should "be prepared for a fire. He suggested that students ,know two ways to escape their apartments or dorm rooms. He advised students to know how to operate fire extingushing equipment in their buildings and be able to sound a warning to other students in case of fire. Robertson said fires often were caused by careless smoking or electrical problems and that overloaded circuits, rather than blowing a fuse, can cause a Tire. Extension cords should not be placed under rugs because foot traffic can rub the insulation off the cord and cause a fire, he said. The Chapel Hill Fire Department is sponsoring a Home Inspection Program, Robertson said. UNC Fire Marshal Mike Flurry or a resident assistant in the dorms could inspect students rooms, he said. Flurry said the fire department also was sponsoring a fire safety prevention ' and escape program for the RAs who : then can pass the information on" 16 the other students. Flurry said half the dorms already have had this program. Avery, Craige, Ehringhaus, Hinton James, Morrison and Teague are the only dorms which do not have fire alarms, he said. These suite-type dorms have easier access to the outside than the ' hall-type dorms, which is probably why they do not have alarms, Flurry said. Flurry said he was contacting James Condie, director of student housing, to see if students would be able to have smoke detectors in their rooms. Most apartment owners are willing to let people put smoke detectors in their apartments, Flurry said. 'Property values may double after county completes survey The average assessed market value for Orange County property is expected to double after " this year's property re evaluation, Orange County Tax Supervisor Bill Lawes said last week. "It (property value) will probably double, and urban land may do even better than that," he said. However, the doubled market value from which Orange County, Chapel Hill and Carrboro taxes are calculated may not mean that property owners will have to pay more taxes, he said. "When the market value increases, usually the tax rate decreases," he said. "It's entirely up to the Board (of Commissioners)." "It's just a realignment of value," Lawes said. . " In March, Byer Appraisal of Lebanon, Ohio, began surveying all parcels of property in the county. They are expected to finish by the end of the year, Lawes said. State law requires that counties re evaluate property every eight years. The Board of Commissioners can choose . between marking all property valueup by a certain percentage or conducting a ' survey and appraisal of all property. ; The survey allows for relative changes -." in the market value of property, Lawes 4 said. "Generally it's the location that determines how much property value will increase." . ' The urban areas of Hillsborough, Chapel Hill and Carrboro will increase more than rural property, he said. AH property owners will be notified in February of the assessed value of their property, Lawes said. Appeals can be made to the county and eventually to the 'state Property Tax Commission. JEFF BOWERS i , ' i save gas i lo.v. . m Z Or, K9 B I I a -J I 1 1 if GOOD THROUGH OCT 31 SILVER ODYSSEY THE NEWEST AND MOST EXCITING ELECTRONIC GAMES -ft l 421 W. FRANKLIN ST. j LIMIT 2 COUPONS FE! CUSTOMER f 1 T S ONE FREE 25$ GAME If rV v&KMG GARDEN RESTAURANT 'I ' Dine amid the art of China Gourmet food from all four corners of China Pekirra. Szechuan. Canton. Shanohai y i rsr S j 4 Quality meats & produce TAKE-OUT SERVICE KSX SPECIALS AT LUNCH All lunches trved with fried rice egg oli. choice of entree ond soup II on 2 p m MonOy frtdoy ( AiSO UVf RCGOIAI INU AT tUNCM -EAST H IAN KLIN ST., CHAPEL KILL 942-1613 PEKING GARDEN II SOUTH SQUARE MALL. PUKHAM 493-3119 lunch: Weekday 1 1 om-2 pm Sat. & Sun. 12-2:20 pm Dinner: 5-10 pm doiV ft fj $ f "I 1 t r m 1 m & yT 0 0 r tr uf a 0 r t D O YOU 1 1 ii li:D MONEY. WE ARE BUYING GOLD AND SILVER! NAVAJO TRADING FG31 510 VV. FRANKLIN STREET 929-0263 WE ARC CUTING DIAMONDS 4 I VM I We zre no-.v bavin-. CLASS RINGS, DENTAL GOLD, KZDO fl;Dirx cands. gol coins, gold ievxuiy, silveij f .:iEv;:Lrx ythinr, . n:cED ic:c, i::, ic:c gold cr c;?igx V.'r tnt umrijrkfd ro!J. "VwE PAY TOP DOLLAIt FOR STEHUNG SILVER O 1 ft f 1 SllXUl COINS a j-rct;.:!::r:i pr;t-s i::i::z 1:1 cu:i co:.::zTiTor.s ad: and v.xxl GIVEYCU AIIIGHEIinilCE tJitN M.SAi.9-6ii,L'N. 12-4 i C. ft li. to 7! 2 t.'.nih It, 2? 6-77 14 510 Ffirl! n St a at ' e The Carolina Union Presents li LHC3 (( Zjdviil i) ii liiiU ui..wL.iuL mm .1 . UNC a 107th Year Corns hlovj cut candles end enjoy a hugs Birthday Cake, Free lemonade, music and entertainment. Mingle with prcfesecrs in full rcrplia. r"" Af don't n::s tliz .j I T I" m- t " 3 r I - . 1111 . , ; ' ; .s . ? .s a n k -. the total. It now appears that at best Anderson will be able to borrow much less than his campaign strategists had hoped. There is some possibility that he will get no bank loans at all. Countdown c to November Reagan on Nixon ST. LOUIS (AP) Ronald Reagan said emphatically Thursday he would not give Richard M. Nixon a job in his administration, but added he would consult the former president for advice. "No, no, no," Reagan replied when asked if Nixon would play a role in his administration. He said he had talked occasionally with Nixon, and aides said Reagan and staff aides had received unsolicited letters or telephone calls from the former president offering advice from time to time. Ii) an interview last weekend, Nixon had suggested he might be offered some kind of foreign policy advisory role in a Reagan administration. Cartel softens President Jimmy Carter went public with his softer, toned-downed attack on Ronald Reagan on Thursday, but independent John Anderson declared "It's too late" and insisted the president's chances of holding on to the White House were fading. Carter's rhetoric was milder as he began a two-day Southern campaign swing in Tennessee, while Reagan, in St. Louis, declared that "I am an environmentalist...! am for clean air." But the Republican candidate renewed his attack on the Environmental Protection Agency, which he said sometimes insisted on "unreasonable and many times untried standards", to clean up the air. ' j Reagan also turned down an invitation by a Tampa, Fla., television station for a "joint appearance" with Carter when both men are in Florida today. Carter accepted the proposal, in which he and Reagan would answer questions from different locations; but Reagan's spokesman said there would be no deal unless Anderson was included. Anderson campaigned in New York, where he told a news conference that Carter apparently had concluded that his "base and almost desperate attacks" on his rivals were not succeeding, so he "- changing his tune. Yolinriteers to clean nap muds at Clearwater By SCOTT GREEN Staff Writer Clearwater Lake needs volunteers. Interested students should bring picks, shovels, rakes, mallets for a community workday at the lake site this Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., the "Friends of Chapel Hill announced last week. Volunteers will help rake and grade the beach, plant grass seed, spread straw and clear a new parking lot, said Jeff Bass, Friends member and UNC graduate student. The Friends hope for a turnout of 60-100 people, Bass said. All plans have the approval of the Carrboro-Chapel Hill YMCA, which owns the lake. Volunteers will be divided into work crews and supervised by Knox Tate of Design Works and Morris King of Triangle Landscaping. Tate and King will be working for free, Bass said. Mauer & Son Construction Co. and grading contractor Steve Pendergraft will do advance work on the parking lot, charging the YMCA just the cost of materials, he said. "These are services that would normally be quite expensive," Bass said. "They have been with us out at the lake a number of times. They've been overly generous." The YMCA has had Clearwater Lake up for sale .since last October. The Friends, a self-organized group of private citizens, petitioned the owner to keep the lake available to the public by selling it to Chapel Hill. "We though it was a very valuable community resource," Bass said. "That lake is the only natural swimming resource within 15 miles (of town)." The YMCA decided to keep the lake in July, despite the need of $100,000 to keep the lake operating. The future of the lake remained uncertain until August, when the YMCA received a $150,000 donation from the estate of private citizen Margaret Gulick. A similar workday in the spring may be planned if Saturday's turnout is a large one, Bass said. 112 Ucst U.G. Ccino D Elcriutrcd if V J J I i k " , 1 T7W TV T.s.Miors witty, Comic Masterpiece Opens PRC'S 5th Celebration Season Playmakers Theatre Oct. 9-26 Tickets: 06.75 to $7.75 Call 933-1121 for tickets 'ivVy ..,,.,..., y ii ,iiw,if t,.... A A r i ' ' ft'. i t I . t.4 I Our bost beccony heavy plush installed vith pad ested Ptcl $21 .50 pet ycd SwQted P.etcl $9 3 pt yo'd I N y f f ! vl:c oc:a$ Of cacr - rrn w - wyAiLtc v-x HC- 1 -v PLUS ALL LI LEU.' A AT 20 OFF! C-.J H'1 '''"!? I rt-, U C'.O ft-' t3 17 f r , ! t ( t .
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 10, 1980, edition 1
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