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Cy HO ANN CISIIO?
Staff Writer
In a report to the UNC Board of
Trustees Friday, UNC Director of
Student Aid Eleanor Morris said that
expected increase:; in federal financial
aid funds will not provide adequate
resources for the increase in student aid
applications anticipated because of the
September passage of the Higher
Education Amendment.
"This amendment will make more
middle-income students eligible to
receive student aid,' Morris said.
"However, there is no influx of dollars
to take care of these additional
applicants.
"We definitely need new sources of
funds," she said.
About 90 percent of student financial
aid is funded by federal sources, Morris
said, with the University providing an
additional 10 percent through gifts,
loans and work programs.
In 1979-19S0, $15.8 million was
provided in aid to more than 7,500 UNC
students. This year S17 million will go to
UNC students.
In 1979-1530, 84 percent" of the $15.8
million was provided by the federal
government, compared with 82 percent
of the $17 million provided by the
federal government this year.
One of the programs of student
financial aid, the Federal Basic Grant,
will provide $2.8 million to UNC
students in 19GO. The same amount was
provided last year.
The Guaranteed Student Loans
program credited $5.3 million to UNC
students in 19S0.
Although the Guaranteed Loan
program is growing, financial aid
officials are having ' problems with
students repaying the loans, Morris said.
Students can and will be sued if those
loans aren't repaid, Morris said.
This year, out of 13,000 students who
applied, 8,000 received aid, Morris said.
The average amount of money received
by a UNC student was $2,200.
In other action, Chancellor
Christopher C. Fordharn III announced
Eleanor Morris
in closed session Friday his "choice for
the new vice chancellor for University
Affairs. The person who fills the new
post created by Fordharn will be
concerned with the status of minority
students and employees on this campus.
If approved by the Board of Trustees,
Fordham's nominee will be reviewed by
the Board of Governors at its Nov. 14
meeting.
Democratic candidates, from Lt.
Gov. Jimmy Green to President Jimmy
Carter, are all likely winners in North
Carolina on Election Day next week,
according to a Charlotte Observer poll
In its third poll of the campaign, the
Observer found little change in the
major races, except in the U.S. Senate
contest, in which Republican challenger
John East is gaining on incumbent
Robert Morgan.
East, a conservative East Carolina
University political science professor,
has picked up 6 percentage points on
Morgan since the last poll was
published, and 10 percentage points
since the first poll was released.
The poll, conducted during the third
week of October, surveyed 822
registered voters, chosen randomly from
every county. '
The poll has a margin of error of plus
or. minus 3.5 percent meaning if a
comparable sample were drawn 20
times, results would vary by no more
than 3.5 percent in 19 instances.
The poll shows Carter continuing to
lead Republican Ronald Reagan in the
presidential race by a 47 percent to 35
percent margin, while incumbent Gov.
Jim Hunt has a 71 percent to 20 percent
Need a costume?
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Ey MARC ROUTII
Staff Writer
You want an elephant costume for Halloween? Or
perhaps you'd like an authentic Roman toga for the
next toga party. But you don't know where to look.
Don't fret, the UNC Department of Dramatic
Art's third annual costume sale and auction is at 1
p.m. today in the courtyard on the Morehead side of
Graham Memorial. The sale items, the result of a
recent house cleaning by the department's Costume
Shop, are inexpensive. A special auction for major
costumes will be held beginning at 1:30 with Edgar
Marston as auctioneer.
The Costume Shop has a stock accumulated
over 60 years. According to Bobbi Owen, associate
professor of speech and the resident costume
designer, the most extensive collections are World
War II outfits, tuxedos and men's lace-up shoes. The
majority of the costumes made by the shop are in the
Victorian period.
The storage area for the Costume Shop runs the
entire length of Graham Memorial and has enough
items to stock several stores in a mall. One room with
vast racks could furnish a super shoe store. The
multitude of dresses, shirts and pants in the area
could be used to start a clothing store. And the large
number of sewing machines, irons, washers and
dryers make some parts of the storage area seem like
a laundry or a Singer headquarters.
The Costume Shop's design and construction
process is very ordered, with a special emphasis on
realism. The designer studies the play he's working
on and then does renderings, which are detailed,
sketches of each costume. A cutter makes patterns
from the drawing.
A pattern is cut from muslin, an inexpensive fabric
used to check the accuracy of previous measurements
and fittings. When the real fabric is finally cut,
muslin is often used as a lining.
"The construction process emphasizes the external
creation, but it is important to consider the internal
as well," Owen says. "A good designer considers the
social customs of the period, the character in the play
and the particular actor to wear the costume."
The shop designs and builds a wide variety of
productions for the department of dramatic art.
These include the undergraduate and graduate
plays, the laboratory theater, and the Playmakers
Repertory Company. The shop also designs for local
operas, Chapel Hill High School productions and
occasionally RTVMP and medical television shows.
lead over Republican hepeful I. Beverly
I .Vn Tr
Morgan is supported by 52 percent of
those surveyed, while East is choice of
32 percent. Fifteen percent are
undecided, and 1 percent prefer other
Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green leads his
Republican challenger, Bill Cobey, 61
percent to 20 percent. Nineteen percent
are undecided in that race, according to
the Observer.
Countdown c
to November
Debate prep
While police and Secret Service agents
converged on Geveland for this week's
debate beteen President Jimmy Carter
and Republican Ronald Reagan, the two
candidates spent Sunday cramming for
what one pollster described as the "high
risk, high-payoff event on nationwide
television.
Reagan's top campaign staff took
briefing books to Wexfcrd, the rented
country estate at Middltburg, Va., to
help the GO? nominee prepare for his
showdown with Carter.
The president spent the day at Camp
David, Md., demg the same thing. He
leaves today for Cleveland with
campaign stops along the way in West
Virginia and Kentucky. Reagan is
scheduled to meet with former President
Gerald R. Ford today and head for the
debate site Tuesday afternoon..
t
Inside the cavernous Cleveland
Convention Center, where the SO-rninute
debate will begin at 9:33 p.m. EST
Tuesday, bright lights beamed on the
hardwood floor as stage hands waited
under a giant American flag for two
bulletproof podiums to arrive from
Washington. Security agents took up
positions around the hall.
Reagan's vice presidential running
mate, George Bush, who visited
Cleveland Saturday, joked that "my
role will be issuing a statement saying
Reagan won the debate, which I'd be
glad to do right now because I'm
confident he will."
Accident kills youth
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An accident which killed one Chapel
Hill resident and injured three others
Saturday night caused a power outage in
the area.
Christopher Johnson, 20, drove his
pickup truck off the right-hand side of
the road at the intersection of South
Columbia Street and Purefoy road and
hit a telephone pole. The accident
occurred about 11 p.m.
A juvenile was killed in the wreck.
The person's name would not be
released by the Chapel Hill Police
Department.
Injured were Johnson, andp3ssengers
Rebecca Carter, 16 and John Vilas, 19.
An investigation is still pending as to the
cause of the accident.
A Duke Power spokesman said he did
not know the extent of the power
outage. However, students reported
blackouts at the Chi Psi Lodge,
University Square, Granville Towers and
Fraternity Court.
SAY I LOVE YOU un.DCOMAT c
in the D 1 H PuRSONALS
CGC committee to hold IiefiFinso
The Campus Governing Council
Election Laws Revision Committee will
hold today and Wednesday public
hearings on revisions of campus elcciton
bylaws.
Today's hearing will be held from
7-8:30 p.m. in room 215 of the Carolina
Union. Guest speakers will include
Student Supreme Court Chief Justice
Roy Cooper and UNC law student Allen
Jcrnigan. Craig Brown, a graduate
student in public policy at Duke
University, also will speak. Brown, a
UNC graduate, was the prosecutor in
the Student Supreme Court case last
spring which challenged the validity of
the election results for the referendum
allocating a set amount of student
activities fees to the Graduate and
Professional Student Federation.
Former Elections Board Chairman Jill
Linker will be the guest at Wednesday's
hearing, 6:30-9:30 p.m. in the Frank
Porter Graham Lounge of the Carolina
Union. '
KEIUIY DEROCIII
Noise surveyors to call student
Low student response to an Action
Line survey about the noise ordinance .
has prompted the surveyors to actively
solicit responses.
"We're going to start calling students
in different areas this week to see if we
can get enough responses," said Student
Government Town Affairs
Representative Susan Strayhorn. She
said about 10 students had called Action
Line to voice their opinions on the
ordinance and noise problems in general
during the two-week survey period, but
the data had not yet been compiled
because of the small sample size. "We'll
try to get 10 'students from each
(residence) area," she said.
The noise ordinance is being revised
by Chapel Hill Town Manager Gene
Shipman who said he would present a
final draft at today's Town Council
meeting. A preliminary report on the
ordinance was available for students to
see, Strayhorn said, but the town
attorney now has this report.
Shipman would not comment on the
changes the report would make.
"Because the report is not finished," he
said, "I am not prepared to discuss the
changes."
DIANE LUPTON
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Tho Fleming Center has been hero for you clneo 1074...
providing private, undcretendln health caro
to vrcrncn cf all c:a... at a reasonable ccet
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The Fleiniivl Center... vro'ro hero when you need ue.
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GRADUATE
SCHOOL OF
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LINIVERS!
Daoloeco Adololotir atlio
at the
. will be on campus.
i . : October 20 9:CQ-4:CDV' ' r' ' " .
Graduate programs available include:
For schedule information, please contact
Oface of University placement Service?
UUxf ()ii!) fZfttiuufl itM3i'i'
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HEALTH AFFAIRS CAREER NTTE
Have you looked into careen in HEALTH RELATED fields?
Find out more about:
NURSING
MLDiCAL TECHNOLOGY
RADIOLOGIC SCIENCE
Cr.NTAL HYGIENE
NUTRITION
PHARMACY
CYTCITXI INOIjOGY
REHAB HJTATK3N COUN5Z3JNO
DENTAL ASS!STT;0
PHYSICAL THERAPY
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
HEALTH ADNflNSTRATION
OCCUPATIONAL TS 'LRAFY
HEALTH EDUCATION
EIOSTATI3T1CS
SPIXOI AND HEARINO SQENCES
MONDAY, OCTOBER 27,
7-9 pm in the GREAT IIALL
Representatives from Prc-Career Experience Prograin (PEP), HospitiS Volunteer Smicts
Office, University Placement Services Office, and the North Carolina lleaJJi Mar?oar
Development Program will also be there and will nuke brief pretentions at the propxti'i
be;innin. .
Sponsored by: Division of Health Affairs, General College, Alpha tpsilan Delta, Preprcfes
sional HeaUh Society. m
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Dr. Henry A. Greene, Optometrist
Is Pleased To Announce
The Opening Of An Office For
Eye Health and Vision Examinations
i4nrf Contocf Lens Care
October 1, 1980
3115 Academy Road (Lower Level)
Durham, North Carolina 27707
919)493-7456
Special Services Are Available For:
Children, The Aged, and The Visually Handicapped
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