Page 3 Three Candidates Campaign for DTH Editor Campus-wide elections will be held on Wednesdy, February 14. Three candidates for Daily Tar Heel Editor declared their candidacey to the BSM. Allen Jernigan, Reid Tuvim, and David Stacks have each expressed their desires to function in the editor position. Jernigan, a junior jour nalism major from Raleigh, hopes to make the DTH a paper worth looking for. He favors having more papers printed and an improved distribution system. He also feels that the DTH must probe situations of racial and sexual descrimination. He favors unbiased reporting of racism and sexism. Jernigan feels that soccer and women’s basketball should be recognized as major sports. He also hopes to start an Intramural and club sports scoreboard. Jernigan has served as editor of the Summer Tar Heel, Photography editor, columnist and photographer, and has contributed to Nutshell Magazine, ACC Basketball Hand book, and Cellar Door. Tuvim, a junior journalism major from Charlotte, favors a balanced coverage of national, state, and local and campus news, with a strong emphasis on student stories. He also favors finding a solution to the distribution problem of the DTH. He plans to have papers delivered to every dorm on campus. Tuvim plans to work with the Tar Heels full-time business staff to reach a more equitable solution. Tuvim favors increased coverage of the university administration and coverage of the various organizations, including the BSM. He also feels that beats should be better covered. Tuvim has worked with the DTH staff since his freshman year. He has served as copy editor, night editor, assistant managing editor^nd news editor. He was the first editor of Weekender, and worked on the news desk of the Greensboro Daily News this past summer. Stacks, a junior journalism major from Blowing Rock also favors a better distribution system of the DTH. He also feels that the DTH should be a showcase of student-oriented ac tivity. Stacks has served as state and Midnight Blues airs on WXYC UNC’s campus radio station WXYC has a new addition to its program ming schedule. A musical program, entitled Midnight Blues, airs Monday nights from midnight until 3 a.m. The show is produced by Orlando Dbbin. Dobbin, a junior RTVMP major got the idea for the program from his Radio Production class. During the program, Dobbin plays rhythm and blues music. He ex plained, “I’ve been instructed to exclude disco and popular music that is played at parties. I’m hoping that this will change.” The Gamer native has been in terested in radio work since the age of nine. Working at the radio station is a fulfillment of a dream he has always had. I hope that students will call in more, Dobbin stated, I would like to give students what they want;’’ He plays requests for students during his program. Dobbin also makes public service announcements, focusing on campus events, and speakers. Midnight Blues presently is a one night a week affair, but Dobbin hopes that the program will be extended to other nights during the week. Dobbin feels that music has played a big role in the Black Experience and he attempts to convey his feelings through the sweet mellow sounds of rhythm and blues to the campus community. jm staff photo by D«wese GUyard national editor for the DTH. He has written for The Associated Press and the United Press International, and has worked for the UNC Jounalist and (he University Student Handbook. Stacks has spent the past two sum mers as a reporter for the Greensboro Record. Jack Brayboy demon strates the “class,” in dicative of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, at a recent fashion show sponsored by the Kappas. Currently, the Kappas are 'seeking aniversity clearance to sponsor a campus-wide beauty pageant. NEWS, NOTES On Campus Cranford campaigns for CGC Greg Cranford announced his candidacy for Campus Governing Council for District 10 (Hinton James). Cranford hopes to implement ideas which the residents of James submit as suggestions. Cranford, a sophomore from Newton, North Carolina, hopes to push the CGC for a Black Studies requirement at UNC. “It is important for all students to understand and be challenged by minority perspectives and cultures because in a desegregated society we must all deal with these.” He also favors a quicker proposal and financial support for the proposed South Campus Union. Cranford also favors an increase in BSM funding. “It is almost the only student-funded organization that displays Black culture on a supposedly “liberal” but traditional White campus. Cranford dislikes the scholarships that are provided for the officers of student body president, treasurer, and attorney general. He hopes that this will be eliminated. Cranford hopes to suggest that the CGC meetings will become open to the public. Cranford, favors the CGC ^ringfest idea for the spring and plans to see that the project is successfully completed and planned for next year. Cranford is a Union Social Committee member, a BSM member, and Upward Bound tutor, a campus Y Big Buddy participant, and a Young Democrats member. Candidates for Senior office Janet Moss and Karen Tagalos contacted the BSM office to announce their candidacy for senior class president and vice-president respectively. Moss, a junior zoology major from Mathews, N.C., has served as a resident advisor, on the Orientation Committee, and with the Big Brother program. Tagalos, a junior studio art major from Charlotte, also works as a resident advisor and has worked on the Orientation Committee. Both candidates enjoy working with others and becoming involoved. A major plan which the two hope to further implement is the Senior Panic Week, which was started by the present officers. Minority health conference The Minority Student Caucus and the Student Union Board of the School of Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill invites you (public) to participate in their 3rd Annual Minority Spring Health Conference to be held at the School of Public Health on February 21 and 22, 1979. This year’s theme is entitled: “REACHING MINORITIES WHERE THEY ARE; A CHALLENGE TO THE HEIALTH PROFESSIONAI.S.” The keynote speaker will be Dr. Geocge Lythcott, Director of Health Services Administration, Department of Health, Education and Welfare. There is no registration fee for the conference. Each participant will be responsible for his4ier expenses. If there are any further questions regarding the program, please contact Bill Small, Dean of Student Affairs at (919 ) 966-4152. Instructor Attends Convention Freddie L. Parker, and instructor at North Carolina Central University recently at tended the 63rd Annual Convention of The Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History at the Bonaventure Hotel in Los Angeles, California. He presented a paper entitled, “The Law Is Too Slow: Lynchings in North CaroliJia, 188&-1906.” Parker was a meml)er of the Upward Bound Program at UNC-CH, 19P8-1971. The Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees were received at North Carolina Central University, 1975 and 1976, respectively. He is currently a member of Phi Alpha Theta National Honor Society in History, the Pi Gamma Mu National Social Science Honor Society; the American Historical Association and the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History. Additionally, he is doing graduate work toward the Ph.D. at Duke University.