Budgetbalanced

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Budgetbalanced Puttin' out fire ti rf( Burnin' out the house rK Pi Partly cloudy today with a 30 fTl I 1 Kappa Phi fraternity will percent chance of ill celebrate its eighth annual (Mbt Burn-ou- thunderstorms. High around t today with 50 kegs 70, low around 50. Continued of beer and music by the chance of thunderstorms Killer Whales. Profits go to Saturday. the burn center. Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Copyright 1984 The Daily Tar Heel. All rights reserved. Volume 92, Issue 20 NewsSportsArts 9624)245 fr96l.'eU!JdV'tep!Jj 962-116- Chapel Hill, North Carolina BusinessAdvertising 3 '84-8-5 budget balanced Fewer N--4 i f f I I Finance Committee recommends average Xvv vo Nft I lot spaces cuts ofstudent organizations 50-7-5 percent available By JANET OLSON outreaches to both University-affiliate- d ment to the budget bill that the CGC Staff Writer and non-affiliat- ed groups. In addition, reinstate funding for the wire service. If SECS offers 24-ho- ur call-i- n service and a Student Government refused to provide By MIKE ALLEN The Campus Governing Council daily walk-i- n service without waiting enough funds for the station, WXYC Staff Writer Finance Committee will present a balanc- lines, Dorer said. would be less accountable to students ed budget of about $224,000 to the full Dorer said she planned to attend the because it would be using less of their j D J J j The number of N-- 4 parking permits CGC for approval Saturday. CGC meeting Saturay in an attempt to money, he said. o i fH j sold for the 1984-8-5 school year will be At a marathon budget hearing get her organization funded, but she cut from 423 to 212, and none will be sold off-camp- us Wednesday night which concluded feared other groups might resent her ask- Student Television suffered a 50 per- to students, according to . Thursday morning at about 5:45, the ing for money which would essentially be cent cut in its request for Student yT Larry Davis, leader of the Student Park- Finance Committee reduced its previous taken from their budgets. Government funding. STV asked that the vi)W!' f ing Task Force. appropriations to student organizations WXYC also suffered a major budget committee allocate $5,985 to cover opera- by about $39,000. As expected, the cut, as the committee voted to recom- tional expenses. The committee voted to Because of construction of a new com- reduction meant further cuts for most mend the station do away with its United appropriate $2,993 and requested that puter science building behind Carroll student organizations. Average cuts rang- Press International wire service, thereby STV raise the remaining $2,992. Hall, 140 faculty spaces will be moved ed from 50-to-- percent. allowing a $4,200 cut in WXYC's budget. from the lot behind Carroll Hall to N-- 4 Committee members failed to balance Newman said the committee's justifica- Newman said committee members and N--5 lots on North Campus, Davis the budget during first budget hearings of tion for the cut was that WXYC could air decided to halve the request, because they said Wednesday. the 35 groups requesting funding. The local and campus news rather than wire felt students had already voted to loan committee then selected organizations for service news. STV $22,000, a relatively large portion of Davis said 423 permits were sold this Student Government funds. year for 353 N--4 spaces. He said there further discussion and made further cuts. don't think the mission "I station's would be no overselling for the coming Tim Newman, chairman of the hear- was hurt by that cut," Newman said. ing, Newman said there was heated debate ?! year. said that because all student "They can work the local news beat a lit- organization representatives had left by at the hearing between the committee and tle more instead of just ripping and J) N-- STV representatives. Newman said STV Davis said the approximately 180 4 the time the committee held its second reading wire reports." off-camp- discussion, these groups would be con- Chairman John Wilson argued fund spaces allotted to us students WXYC station manager Bill Burton raising had already been allocated to this year would be redistributed on South tacted before the second proposals were ill ' ' added to the budget bill. said Thursday the loss of the wire service meeting equipment expenses. STV will c Campus next year, either in the Hinton The committee recommended no ap- would cut the station's staff in half. The receive $15,000 and $20,000 grants from C James lot, F-lo- t, or possibly the Craige propriations go to the Sexuality Educa- WXYC news staff does not have time to undisclosed sources. lot. One benefit of the new plan would be tion and Counseling Service. research news stories, Burton said. In ad- an additional 140 spaces would be conve- Wilson declined to comment on the off-camp- us Thursday, dition, staff members would not receive nient for students who study Newman, said committee committee's appropriation. members decided SECS services overlap- a physical product of their efforts, he in Davis Library. ped with those the Contraceptive said, and the experience they might gain of Among other budget cuts, the commit- In N -- " would be insubstantial. I V Health Education Clinic and Student tee voted to cut the Student Consumer irV l Robert E. Sherman, director of securi- Health Services. ty services for University Police, said a "That experience wouldn't be worth Action Union's Underground Course But SECS co-direc- Nancy Dorer Guide and plan was being considered to give s-- cut the ," Burton said. to Executive Branch's said Thursday she felt the committee had graduate students, seniors and juniors Burton said his only options without presidential and treasurer scholarships by acted on misconceptions about SECS. priority in permit distribution for North enough student government funding 50 percent. No capital expenditures were Dorer said SECS provides services that Campus lots. The rising sophomore class would be to find grants, raise funds or approved. CHEC and SHS do not, including peer 's i will, for the most part, be sold South turn the station into a radio jukebox. r tf Campus permits. sex- ss-O- counseling, counseling on all areas of s 1 nxv. uality, relationship counseling and Burton said he was writing an amend See HEARINGS on page 2 Student Body President Paul Parker said the new Student Activity Center lot could be used for commuter parking, but Candidates debate s no resident permits would be sold for the ERA future lot. Parker said the lot would have to be By TOM CONLON . DTHJeff Neuville cleared on game days for Rams Club Staff Writer UNC shortstop Walt Weiss throws out baserunner in 7-- 2 win Thursday parking. .The new lot will give the Rams Club an extra 1,000 spaces in addition to Charging that the N.C. Senate is run the lot behind Kenan Stadium. by three individuals and that a major Police report no rapes area vice-chancell- problem exists in getting progressive Charles Antle, associate or legislation passed, 16th District senate By DEBORAH SIMPK1NS proach several times. of business, said parking per- mit prices for the 1984-8- 5 year would be candidate Don Stanford said Thursday Staff Writer "We're not doing the same thing that $1 $9 per per- night he would stand up and fight to pass we were doing before," Pendergraph increased by per month, or . .. said in- such legislation. 0f The Chapel Hill Police Department said. "We're trying not to get locked into mit for the entire year. Parker the Stanford, a Chapel Hill attorney, said Thursday that no rapes had been the point (where) we're predictable crease in price would help fund an in- spoke at a candidate's forum on women's reported since the March 28 attack on a enough for him (the rapist) to alter the crease in shuttle bus activity to and from issues at the Community Church on woman near Umstead Park. time and the day of the week that he South Campus. Purefoy Road, sponsored jointly by the Mary Ann Chap, director of the operates," he said. Orange County Day Care Coalition, Orange County Rape Crisis Center, also Pendergraph said it is possible the "We are working on a comprehensive plan to prevent these same problems from Children's Services News, Womens said no rapes have been reported. rapist is being cautious because of the re- Health Counseling, the Rape Crisis Lt. Ralph Pendergraph of the Crime cent publicity, which was generated by appearing in the future," Parker said. He Center and Orange County Women's Prevention Department said since a com- the police department's news conference said there had not been a successful plan in past, is Center. posite of the rapist was released on April on April 4. the but there a good chance a solution could finally be reached. About 100 people, mostly women, at- 4 the department has received many calls Rape attacks are not always predictable tended the forum where U.S. Congress, and letters about possible suspects. He in cycles, Pendergraph said. N.C. Senate, and Orange County Com- said the department was checking out He said 15 extra officers have been Both Davis and Parker urged students missioner candidates spoke on women's each reported suspect. Although assigned to the case just from his depart- to register for parking permits as soon as and children's issues.
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