Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 19, 1985, edition 1 / Page 2
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2The Daily Tar HeelTuesday, February 19. 1985 Co-presidents to project Campus M Ima ge By RACHEL STROl'D StafT W riJcr Juniors Roger Orstad and Kim Reynolds have been elected Campus Y co-presidents for 1 985-86. Orstad said one of the major goals he hoped to accomplish was "to project the image of Campus Y more on campus." He also said he wanted to promote more community interaction with programs that would bring people in communities closer together. "Committees dealing with similar interests, like racism or poverty would be a way to help accomplish this goal,' Orstad said. Reynolds agreed. "We are going to try to have a more open-door policy, where more non-members will be able to become involved," Reynolds said. Reynolds added that she hoped to hold more Campus Y events in prominent places like the Pit or Franklin Street. Jennifer Ayer, 1 984-85 Campus Y co-president with David Brown, said she thought the two terms would differ because she and Brown took a more inward look at the Y in order to strengthen its internal structure. Orstad and Reynolds, she said, would probably take a much more outward view and more of an issue-oriented approach. Brown arl He thought Orstad's and Revnold's term would be both "adventuresome and exciting." "I think they both have a lot of interesting ideas of cooperating with other groups on campus, and they will work well together," Brown said. Also elected for the Campus Y Executive Com mittee were: Lucy McClellan, secretary; Murphy Townsend and Sue Kuhn, co-treasurers; and Rah Bickley, Rudi Colloredo-Mansfeld, Cathy Cowan and Lisa Dickerson, members at large. Information about becoming involved in the Campus Y and applicatons for committee chairper sons will be available at the Y building next week. Street-Scene gives young students place to call their own By BETH OWNLEY SUIT Writer After three years of delays, Chapel Hill and Carrboro teen-agers will soon have their own nightclub on Franklin Street. The Street . Scene, located in the basement of the post office, is in the fjnnl Ktnnft of construction, said the Rev. Gordon Dragt of the Chapel Hill Community Church. There has been a major renovation of the post office basement, Dragt said. The Street Scene has a large main room, with a dance floor, a stage and a deejay booth. The club also has a pool table and a wide screen television. Dragt said that at times music would Convenience store robbed Sunday A Carrboro convenience store was robbed of approximately $100 at about 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Carrboro police said. According to police, a man entered the Dot-N-Dash on Smith Level Road and asked clerk Scott Edwards for a pack of cigarettes. When Edwards turned toward the shelf where the cigarettes are kept, the man pulled out a .32 or .38-caliber, blue, 4-inch barrel pistol and asked for money, police said. Police are searching for a white male about 6 feet 2 inches tall, weighing between 16 and 170 pounds, with brown hair and a mustache, lhe man was wearing a blue jean jacket, blue jeans, a green T-shirt, tennis shoes and a black cap. He was last seen walking in the direction of Frank Porter Graham Elementary School, police said. Edwards was alone in the store at the time of the robbery. Anyone with information about the robbery should call the Carrboro Police Department at 942-8541. LISA BRANTLEY be provided by live bands. When that is the case, a fee will probably be charged, but the emphasis is not on charging a lot of money, he said. "We want kids to feel welcome and not have to worry about finances," he said. Almost all the renovation has been done through donated funds, materials and time, . Dragt said. The towns of Chapel Hill and Carrboro, local con struction firms, the PTA, the Chapel Hill Chamber of Commerce, the Chapel Hill Merchants Association and service organizations donated to the center, he said. The center got its name because many local junior and senior high students like the scene on Franklin Street, Dragt said. In keeping with its name, the club's directors have decorated with street signs and a huge, neon logo. Studies of underage drinking con ducted by the town, University and local civic groups spurred the development of the teen center, Dragt said. Mike Raleigh, director of Street Scene, said that movies were the only entertainment in downtown Chapel Hill for teen-agers and the teen center provided an alternative for them. The community thought the center should be on Franklin Street because it is the main street of Chapel Hill, Dragt said. "Chapel Hill is the hometown of these kids," he said. "They ought to be able to have something on their home town main street. The hometown and the main street should be a place for everybody." "The teen center is a positive move to make a wholesome place for junior high and high school students," Dragt said. "It's really going to be an outstand ing place." ' The Street Scene will be open to junior high students on Friday nights and to senior high students on Saturday nights, Raleigh said. It will also be open on Saturday afternoons, and plans are being made to open it on weekdays after school, he said. Westmoreland drops libel suit Krom staff and wire reports NEW YORK Gen. William C Westmoreland agreed to a settlement with CBS Sunday night, dropping his $120 million libel suit against the network. The settlement said CBS would pay no money to Westmoreland and the network refused to claim respon sibility on the 1982 Vietnam War documentary, the basis of the suit. Legal sources on both sides said "the court of public opinion" was the appropriate forum, not a court of law. CBS would not demand West moreland to pay court costs. Heart implant goes well LOUISVILLE, Ky. Murray P. Haydon went through a "very uneventful night" less than 24 hours after a "perfect" operation to implant the world's third man-made heart and visited with his family, doctors said Monday. Haydon's vital signs were "extremely stable" and his initial recovery was better than that of Bill Schroeder, who had a heart implant in November and has been plagued by nagging fever and flagging spirits that could threaten his life, said Dr. Allan M. Lansing, medical director of the Humana Heart Institute. Cabinet members replaced SEOUL, South Korea South Korean President Chun Doo Hwan replaced 13 of his Cabinet members News In Briev Monday, including his prime min ister, in a bid to meet popular demands for reform, a presidential spokesman said. The upheaval comes in the wake of last week's parliamentary elections in which Chun's political party did not do as well as expected and a new party allied to dissident leader Kim Dae-Jung emerged as a major oppo sition force. Gemayel visits Sidon BEIRUT, Lebanon President Amin Gemayel told jubilant resi dents of the southern Lebanese city of Sidon that their "honorable, national resistance" had secured Israeli's military withdrawal from the area. Gemayel, the first president to visit southern Lebanon since 1964, Sun day said, "This blessed day consti tutes the first step on the road to liberating the south" from Israel's estimated 10,000 occupation forces. Poles urged to strike GDANSK, Poland Defying a threat of imprisonment, Solidarity founder Lech Walesa urged his fellow Poles to go ahead with a planned strike on Feb. 28 to protest food price increases. Award nomination forms available Budget workshop scheduled A mandatory budget workshop for student organizations planning to seek funding from the Campus Governing Council will be held Wednesday at 4 p.m. in Room 206 of the Student Union. There organ ization members will receive infor mation on the CGC budgeting process, including how to compose budgets raise funds and get on the agenda. BSM to celebrate Black History Month WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE American Haart Association pfcjv jaunt" ISfs 9. 1 - r- A HIT DAD D AN 8 15-501 Bypass at tliiott Ma. in N Chapel Hill 933-9248 FREE DELIVERY MOVIE POSTERS Over 2000 different original movie posters vyill be on sale at Northgate Mall (Durham) today through Sat, Feb. 23. The selection of titles will include current favorites like The Terminator, Dune, Rocky III, Ameri can Gigolo, etc. Also on sale will be rock buttons, antique advertis ing signs (Coca-cola, beer, etc.), 8 x 10 color photographs, etc. See Robert Gerwig at booth located between Baskin Robbins and McDonalds. FREE! Bring along this coupon for a free Blues Brothers, Cheech & Chong, Bladerunner. Cat People, or Sheena button. No purchase necessary, while supply lasts. I McDonalds. I" " "cDCCI The Black Student Movement will sponsor "Discovery: A Celebration of Black History," beginning with a party in the Great Hall Friday night and continuing on Saturday. On Saturday, seminars will begin at 1 1 a.m. in the Carolina Union, and there will be a banquet at 6 p.m. in the North Dining Room of Lenoir Hall. Associate Justice Henry E. Frye, the first black appointed to the N.C. Supreme Court and a UNC graduate, will speak at the banquet. Tickets are available for $5 in the Union. Following the banquet, there will be a candlelight vigil in the Pit to celebrate Black History Month. To end the evening, sub-groups of the BSM and Discovery guests will perform a cultural program. Nomination forms for the Order of the Grail-Valkyries and the Katherine Kennedy Carmichael Award are avail able at the Union Information Desk and in Davis and the Undergraduate libraries. The Grail-Valkyries honors under graduate students who have demon strated excellence in scholarship, innov ative service to the University community, dynamic leadership and outstanding character. It also recog n;7oc nroHiiMP students and members of the faculty, staff and administration who have made significant contribu tions to the University community. The Katherine Kennedy Carmichael Award goes to a faculty member who has taken a special interest in the education of women students and who inspires students to broaden their intellectual curiosities and capacities. Nominations must be delivered to Box 20, Carolina Union by 5 p.m. on Feb. 25. Chapel Hill Town Council not concerned about vacant seat for By JAMES CAMERON Staff Writer The Chapel Hill Town Council seat left vacant by the death of council member Winston Broadfoot may not be filled soon, and it may not be filled at all. Broadfoot, who died on Jan. 22, would have been up for re-election next fall. His death left a vacant council seat that must be filled according to the town charter, although procedures for filling the seat such as time limits are not specified, said Lynn Magee, assist-, apt to MayorJoseph Nassif. H It usually takes 30 to 40 days to replace someone who has left the council, Magee said, but it is rare for a seat to become suddenly empty because of a death. The council will probably put the matter on its agenda in the future and decide what it wants to do, she said. It is very possible that the council will not select a replacement at all, according to council member Marilyn Boulton. The council may reduce the number of members from nine to seven, which would mean . holding, a public .hearing and changing the town charter, Boulton said. "We don't have to appoint anyone, but we could," she said. If the council does decide to appoint a replacement, it will have many choices for the seat, Boulton said. Attorney Katherine Wright has expressed interest in the position. Wright, runner-up in the 1983 election, wrote a letter to each member of the council. "I put it in writing," Wright said, "so they would know someone was interested." Wright said she didn't think the council would appoint anyone, and especially not .someone who is .against, . in-field development. i Others, such as neighborhood activist Julie Andersen, have expressed an interest in the vacant seat, Wright added. "This is an area where there has been no discussion of council," Mayor Nassif said Thursday. At present, he said, the only qualifications the council was considering for a replacement were the age and resident requirements of the office. Council member R.D. Smith said it would decide on qualifications when it met to consider selecting a replacement. Nassif said people, wanted , replace ment appointed quickly but added- that t the process took, many; wee.;j I I I I I We cordially invite you to enjoy our SnnrEonmi Emmch.ZM Sjp2cnmll includes a trip to the salad bar or soup bar, homemade yeast rolls, house vegetable and potato for $2.95 Served from 1 1 :30 2:00 Mon-Fri I.-.. .---------4 Diners 157 E. Rosemary 967-5727 Carte Blanche fill the place to The at XJMC 111 ifOv ( Granville Towers ii o Location Downtown & Next to Campus o 10 or 19 meals per week o Air Conditioning and all utilities included o Private Weight Room o Weekly Maid Service o Swimming Pool and Sundeck Where Convenience Is Standard You deserve all the conveniences of Granville Xowers. Applications for Fall are now available. University Square 939-7143 M a Too s Itslisin Ftestsutrsint announces its TUESDAY SPECIAL! ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT! With Mario's Famous Spaghetti Sauce, Salad, and delicious Noon-io pm o baked bread. IK i I 11 (Beverage not included) 1 1 :30 a.m.-1 0 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. near Harris Teeter in 1 1 :30 a.m.-1 0:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat. new section of Kroger Plaza 4 p.m.-1 0 p.m. Sun. All ABC Permits 929-9693 Vv Everyone wants our Fiit of Fioyoder 2 M , landlubbers 4? ; NC M fas' lo Univ Motel J LAnDLmMBiEiKf s r I i iim mm mut mmrri T 'rnfrniift IW- h i r "s: y t Mi V- - ?' j '.. n .f i - - 11 42 MiimI ms Available I Beet and Wine t.iti 'ill! '" ) Li tLn Afxri nnrHvrarviT? j ...Well, we have an urgent need for you! If you have never been a donor with us, bring in this coupon and receive an extra $5 on your first donation, for a total of $12. Not bad helping yourself while helping modern medicine! But hurry, offer expires March 1, 1985. liHUUninani y 2 SIBA-TEC liQlQStCAlS 109Vfe E. Franklin Street (Under Rite-Aid Store) Please Note our new hours 8:30 am-6:00 pm Mon-Fri
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1985, edition 1
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