/The Daily Tar Heel/Friday, Janaury 22, 1993
2
Rounding out the Circle (K):
Service group seeks new faces
By Amy Seeley
Assistant Features Editor
Wanted: Students interested in trav
eling, meeting new friends and helping
others. f
MembersofUNC’schaptersfCircle
K, an international service, organiza
tion, are mounting a recruiting Strive u>
rebuild their dwindling j
UNC Circle K
Creech, a junior from Ayden, said the
club could lose its charter wi th the inter
national organizationif it did not bring
in 10 new members jruhin two yearsj
The club now has about lOraen&ers.
“The biggest problem was the club
had spent four year* net recroiti|§,*t
Creech said. Although UNC Circle 'JCT
of those active students fa ave graduated.
Jennifer Hard, a freshman from
Fuquay-Varina, said she had gained
from her involvement in thedlnb during
the past semester, especiallffrom trav
eling to international and district con
ventions and rallies.
“The people you meet there are<K~™
ally friendly,” Hard said. “Circle K Ha
sort of like a family.”
Creech said she also enjoyed attend
ing conventions. Chapel Hill-Carrboro
GMAT
Marcli 20/June 19
LSAT
Feb. 13/June 14
GRE
April 17/June 5
GET RESULTS!
ENROLL NOW!
FREE DIAGNOSTIC TESTING!
CALL 929-PREP
ODSelect Test Prep
EDUCATIONAL SERVICES, INC.
306 W. Franklin St, Chapel Hill
$£ Dragons mSi}
Garden
Relax in our beautiful atmosphere while you
enjoy our delicious food, or call us for a hot
delicious meal delivered right to your doorl
Free Delivery*
407 W. Franklin 6t (next to McDonald s)
Open 7 days a week for lunch and dinner
929-8143 or 933-1234
Take Out Available
*(lunch minimum of $5. dinner minimum of $ 10)
2 FOR I SALE!
Buy one suit at regular price and get
another of the same value for 6 1
Clan Hall, Geoffry Beene, Hugo Boss,
Bill Blass and Cricketeer
50% Oft
Large Selections of
Ladies' & Men's Wear
(Alterations Hot included)
at die old Nowelts location in University Mall, Chapel Hill * 967-7041
New Store Hours: Mom. - Sat., 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. • Sum., I- 5 p.m.
Kiwanis helps UNC Circle K members
with travel expenses to their conven-
K smdKrwanisarepart of
Clubs on the high school
'M August, Creech traveled to the
international convention in San Arno
lfo, Tex as, to represent the local chap
ter and vote for the Circle X interna
tional board of representatives.^
Last weekend, she attended; a “per
sonal gn > wth weekend” in Gainesville,
Ga., for the southeastern region of the
organization " \wlllllll§fl 1
"The best thing I’ve gotten out of the
chib if the contact,” Creech said. “It’s
gotten me to meetawholelot of people
from other schools ” —~i “
.jSEe'XtNC chapter of
ofthe Cyollnas Distnct’sCapital Divi-s
sion, which includes clubs from N.C.
State University and Duke University.
The area chapters have periodic social
gatherings as well as service projects.
Hardstressed the importanceofCircle
K as aservice organization. “The best is
when you actually get to see the people
yoil're helping ”
Before Winter Break, club members
visited the H illha ven Convalescent Cen
ter of Chapel Hill to sing Christmas
carols and deliver cards to residents.
Hard said the project was special be
cause she could see they appreciated the
visit.
Loans
ment and retention could be helped by
the community service option.
“In many cases, students go into the
military or take jobs out of high school
instead of loans,” he said. “Car pay
ments, college loan payments are a for
eign concept.
“(Clinton’s plan) should help the re
tention rate of low-income students. If
you have to work to stay in school, the
academic continuity is broken.”
Rosalind Fuse-Hall, associate dean
of the College of Arts and Sciences and
an adviser to minority students, said she
was concerned about the program’s
educational scope.
If the program does not include gradu
ate school, students may not “be able to
continue along their chosen educational
path,” she said.
“I am concerned about the ’pipeline’
getting women and people of color
into graduate studies and academic po
sitions,” Fuse-Hall said “It’s sort of
short-sighted. I’m not sure they thought
it through.”
Stan Broadway, executive director
of the N.C. State Education Assistance
Authority, which guarantees repayment
on all student loans in the state, was
skeptical about Clinton’s plan.
Circle K members try to perform
service on the campus as well as in the
community, Creech said.
The service organization and the
Carolina Athletic Association cospon
sored the Mr. UNC contest during
/Homecoming to benefit the Orange
County Association for Retarded Citi
zens.
“to the spring, we’ll be doing the
Kiss toe Ram contest” to benefit the
Ronald McDonald House, Creech said.
Members also plan to help Habitat for
Horn am ry in local building projects.
“We’re open to working with any
other service organization on campus,”
Creech safcM
Circle K alio provides members with
opportunities to be leaders on local,
district and international levels. The
ißteritttioaaiorganization’s current two
year themeis “Impact ofthe Individual.”
TTa*d, who hopes to hold club offices
in the futtffe, said she already had learned
leadendrip skills. “You get a lot of lead
ership qualities,” she said. “You also
team to like yourself and feel comfort
able with yourself.”
Creech said, “It’s up to members
how much they want to put into it.”
UNC Circle K will hold a meeting for
new members at 7 p.m. Monday in the
Frank Porter Graham Lounge of the
Student Union.
from page 1
“I think it’s a very interesting con
cept, but there is quite a bit of work to be
done,” he said. “Going out to create a
brand new program would be a serious
mistake.
“Anything (Clinton) does will cost
money. At some point the credit will
have to be paid.”
Broadway said he was adamant the
existing GSL program be retained in
some form.
“It’s like comparing apples to or
anges,” he said. “The problems that
exist in the GSL program will exist in a
community service program. People will
take the money and not do the work. To
brand the existing program as a failure
is a specious argument.”
Thad Beyle, UNC professor of po
litical science, shared Broadway’s con
cerns.
“The only thing I worry about is that
the sort of students who don’t repay
loans now are the same ones who would
not work off their debt,” he said.
Beyle said that white he was “in
trigued” by the program, he would like
to see it tested first.
“My guess is that this is something
that is a prime candidate for testing in
certain states first,” he said. “Governors
understand this, but I’m not sure con
gressmen and senators do.”
Students were more enthusiastic
about the Clinton plan.
“It seems like a better idea than stu
dent loans,” said Stephanie Fischetti, a
sophomore from Cary.
Fischetti said she thought the plan
would help students and community
members Mike.
“It would give people experience and
give something back to the community.
Many people don’t repay loans on time
or sometimes don’t pay them at all.”
Mark Fleming, a senior from
Salisbury, said he definitely would par
ticipate in the program if it were an
option.
“The reason I like it is not only that
you won’t have to pay the money back,
but also that you’re helping others,” he
said.
Fleming, who receives financial aid,
said he also liked the plan better than
student loans.
“With loans, you have to start paying
the money back within six months (af
ter graduating),” he said. “Some people
can’t even find a job in six months.”
aahhcchHOOl!
$$ $$ PAID VOLUNTEERS NEEDED $$ $$
$$ Sore Throat $$ Fever $$ Headache $$ Asthma $$ Allergy $$
1. Individuals 18 years and older with a SORE THROAT
associated with a cold needed for a short research
study. $60.00 paid incentive for those qualified to
participate.
2. Individuals 18 years and older with a recent onset of
FEVER OF 100.5 associated with a cold or flu needed
for a short research study. $50.00 paid incentive if
qualified to participate.
3. Individuals 12 years and older on daily ASTHMA
medication needed for research studies. Up to $400.00
paid incentive for those chosen to participate.
4. ATTENTION PARENTS!! CHILDREN AGE 4 TO 11
WITH ASTHMA NEEDED FOR RESEARCH STUDIES.
UP TO $400.00 PAID INCENTIVE IF CHOSEN TO
PARTICIPATE.
5. HEADACHE STUDY. Individuals 18 years and older
with occasional or frequent headaches needed for a
short home research study. S4O paid incentive if
qualified.
For more information please call:
Carolina Allergy and Asthma Research Group
at (919) 881-0309
If no one is available to answer please leave message
French hail beheaded Louis XVI
The Associated Press
PARIS—With flowers, tears and a
few flashes of anger, thousands of
French paid homage Thursday to King
Louis XVI, beheaded by revolutionar
ies 200 years ago and now, to many, a
rehabilitated hero.
Some young royalists set fire to a
mock guillotine. Several others were
taken into custody after occupying the
Pantheon, a Paris landmark, and un
furling banner that read, “Long live
the king. Down with the republic.”
But die main bicentennial ceremony
was solemn and peaceful. An esti
mated s,ooopeopl Boy
Scouts in hiking shorts, robed monks
and elderly couples tearfully bearing
bouquets gathered to pray and lay
wreaths in a comer of the sprawling
Place de la Concorde.
The half-bour ceremony was
shunned by the Socialist government.
But U.S. Ambassador Walter
Curley, honoring Louis’ support for
the American Revolution, was among
hundreds who laid flowers on a plot of
grass at the site where the king was
beheaded at 10:22 am on Jan. 21,
1793.
“I was there today because Louis
XVI was very, very instrumental in
our independence,” Curley said later.
“He aided us a great deal, and we
appreciated that, and it was most ap
propriate that we recognized his input
to the establishment of the United
States.”
Polls indicate that a sizable major
Notes
said. “(The Class Notes) are all I stud
ied, and it turned out that was exactly
what was on the test. Another class
might be different though.”
Chris said he used Class Notes to
skip a class consistently because it was
a required perspective in which he had
no interest.
Chris only went to class for the mid
term and the final. He said he probably
would not use Class Notes again be
cause he didn’t have any more “scrub
classes like perspective-fillers.”
“I have a problem with the whole
perspective thing because I’ve taken a
iot of varied classes in the perspective
spirit. Whether or not (buying the notes)
was dishonest is a moot point with me
because the University is treating me as
if I can’t round out my own education.
“If I am interested, I’ll go to the class
and take my own notes.”
Although notetakers like getting paid
for taking the notes they have to take
anyway, and most buyers are pleased
with the quality of their purchase, the
idea of buying notes raises ethics ques
tions. •
Many students probably resort to
Class Notes for required perspective
classes in which they are not particu
larly interested, said Terence Evens, an
anthropology professor who taught
Holly’s class last semester.
“It does seem unfair, but what can
you do?” Evens said. “Some people
borrow notes from other people, and
you can’t control that either.”
He said students who substituted
going to class with buying Class Notes
were cheating themselves. “A signifi
cant number of students are not at the
University to get the best education
available to them,” he said.
“(The ethics question) is an impor
tant issue in higher education and needs
to be thought about and re-evaluated
constantly,” Evens said.
Preschutti said he knew of a student
who prepared his spring semester sched
ule around Class Notes’ offerings.
Frederic Schroeder, dean of students,
said Class Notes were not a violation of
the Honor Code. “(But) itprobably short
cuts the education process.”
Schroeder compared buying Class
Notes to buying Cliff’s Notes and said
the notes did not violate the Honor
Code because they did not involve
graded work or plagiarism.
tty of French people are proud of their
revolution and support toe goverament
by-the-people ideology that emerged.
But contemporary historians often
have been unsparing in their accounts
of the brutality of many leading revolu
tionaries, white presenting more sym
pathetic portraits of Louis XVI.
The tribute to the king was followed
by masses at dozens of churches across
France. The two rival Bourbon and Or
leans branches of France’s royal family
each claiming a right to the defunct
throne held separate masses at
churches in toe Paris area.
“We’re here to honor the memory of
the king assassinated by certain French
men, not toe people of France,” said
Therese France, 63, who came to the
Place de la Concorde by bus from north
ern France. “His support was from the
people, not from the rich.”
Jean Raspail, a writer who treaded
the organizing committee, opened the
ceremony with brief remarks about
Louis’ “sacrifice” and said it was toe
biggest commemoration of tire execu
tion since 1830.
When Raspail announced Curley’s
presence, some onlookers cheered and
shouted, “BravoF’ Among those wait
ing to place flowers after the dignitaries
departed was Lucille Noyelle, 73, of La
Varerare, a Paris suburb.
‘Tm here to honor the memory of
Louis XVI, who was murdered because
he was a Christian,” Mrs. Noyelle said.
“France badly needs to become more
Christian today.”
Staying out of the ethics debate, the
notetakers find their job ideal. “I’d take
the notes anyway,” one notetaker said.
“You have to be really careful about it,
but you have to study off them any
way.”
Another notetaker said taking notes
Employers Recruiting on Campus
RESUME DROP DATE: JAN 26 OPEN SIGN-UP BEGINS: FEB. 10
Date Company Majors Req. fob Grad. SYS
2-15 Milliken & Company CHEM/BA/BS CMGT D92 P
MATH/BA/BS MFGM M 93
OPER J 93
PROD A93
2-15 Milliken & Company COMP/BS MIS M 93 P
COMP/MS DBMC J 93
PROG A93
SOFT
2-15 Paul Revere Insurance ANY/BA/BS SALE D92, M 93 P
J 93, A93, A
2-16 Eli Lilly & Company CHEM/BS CHEM D92, M 93 P
193, A93, D93
2-16 Ferguson Enterprises BU/BS GMGT D92 P
HIST/BA A A93
INDR/BA > A
PHIL/BA
2-16 Southern National Bank ANY/BA/BS ACCT J 92 P
2-17 BN KG A92
FINN D92
MKTC M 93, A
2 -16 Unum Insurance Company ANY/BA/BS SALE M 93, J 93 P
2-16 Waccamaw Corporation BU/BS GMGT M 93 P
INDR/BA OPER J 93
RMGT
2-17 Burlington Industries BU/BS FINN M 93 / P
2-18 ECON/BA MFGM ]93
CHEM/BS SALE
2-17 Roadway Express Inc. BU/BS GMGT M 93 P
INDR/BA MFGM / |93, A
2-17 Wallace Computer Services BU/BS SALE D92 P
ECON/BA M 93
INDR/BA / J 93
spch/ba
2-18 Central Carolina Bank BU/BS BNKG D92 P
/ FINN |93
\ / GMGT
2-19 Liz Claiborne ANYBA/BS GMGT M 93 P
RMGT |93
2-19 Marion Merrell Dow ANY/BA/BS SALE M 93, |93 P
A93, D93, A
2-19 Wachovia Student *BU/BS FINN D93 P
Financial Services
SYS CODES: P (Prescreen), O (Open Sign-Up) * Rising seniors only
Campus Calendar
FRIDAY
NOON: B-GLAD Lesbian Lunch will take place
in 218 Union. Bring your own lunch.
3:30 pjn. Graduate Art Students Association
will have a Tea Talk by Dr. David Werman titled
“Edgar Allen Poe, James Ensor, and the Psychology
of Revenge” in 117 Hanes Art Center.
6:15 pjn. UNC-CH Hillel will hold Shabbat Ser
vices, Reform and Conservative, and a $5 dinner at
210 W. Cameron.
7 p.m. CUAB will welcome Leronne Bennett Jr. to
speak on “Martin Luther King: The Man, The Mes
sage & Our Times” in Memorial Hall.
SUNDAY
3:30 p.m. UNC Hillel will welcome Voices of
North Carolina QsigW Ijprfe §®
(formerly La Terrazza)
at the Sports Bar
Live Rock & Blues every Frl. & Sat
Friday, Jan. 22-Mike Edwards &
the Banned
Sat, Jan. 23 - Bull City Blues Band
Tuesday Specials— *1.75 320 z. draft
504 W. Franklin St. Chapel Hill *929-6978
Mrs. Noyelle, wearing an Ameri
can-flag pin on her lapel, was pleased
by Curley’s presence, but described
tire French government’s absence as
“lamentable.”
The government lavishly celebrated
tire 1989 bicentennial of the revolu
tion, but scheduled no events to mark
Louis’ execution.
Tire national police even made a
short-lived move to ban Thursday’s
ceremony. The bicentennial has pro
voked extensive pufrlic debate over
toe fairness of Louis’ trial and execu
tion by tire revolutionary National
Convention. Numerous articles have
challenged Louis’ traditional image as
a fumbling boor, depicting him in
stead as intelligent and good-hearted.
Across tire Place de la Concorde
from tire main ceremony, several dozen
people gathered to salute tire revolu
tionaries who killed the king. They
served food and wine, and some pa
raded withacrowned pig’s head spiked
cm a broom handle.
“We are celebrating the birth of the
republic to remind people that the
murder of Louis XVI was not the
murder ofa man but of a system,” said
Jean Ristat, a writer who organized the
event
“We shouldn’t be ashamed of it...
What his head hit toe ground, the
people became toe rulers.”
A poll published Wednesday in
Paris Match magazine indicated that
42pereent ofthe public opposed Louis’
execution, while 34 percent approved.
from page 1
for Class Notes motivated her to stay
organized. When she takes notes in class,
she thinks about what she would want
to know if she were not in the class
room, she said.
“It’s good to be paid for being a good
student.”
Sepharad, music and dance of the Jews of Spain, at the
Friday Center.
7 p.m. Newman Catholic Center will have its
student Mass.
8 p.m. Department of Musk will welcome Donald
Milholin, baritone, and Francis Whang, piano, to give
a recital in Hill Hall.
ITEMS OF INTEREST
Student Recreation Center has applications avail
able for Board of Directors and Programming Council
in the Union, CAA Office, BSM office and the IM-
Rec Sports office.
The Order of the Bell Tower has applications
available at the Union Desk. They are due at 5 p.m.
today.