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Daily Tar Heel/Wednesday, April 7, 1993 2 Group: Open up and say 'alilili For most people, a trip to the doctor or dentist is unpleasant, even frighten ing, but the five dental and medical students who appeared in the Union Cabaret dispelled these fears. Earned the Extractions in homage of their chosen professions, the male a capella group’s soothing performance was the perfect acetaminophen to cure Tuesday’s NCAA hangover. “UNC that stands for University of National Champions,” one member said in his opening greeting. Opening with “Run-around Sue” and continuing with a repertoire of ’ 50s do wap, barbershop-choir type and con temporary pop songs, the Extractions delighted the small audience for about two hours. A bit older than undergraduate a cappella groups like the Clef Hangers Summer Housing in Will you be working, doing an internship, or enjoying a summer in New York? You can IV live in the heart of Greenwich Village as an lAlir summer sessions if you wish. - Bvl 88 • Minutes from New York’s business and /I* | cultural centers Vlly • Apartment-style and traditional residences; single and double occupancy • Outstanding sports-recreation facility • Includes the New York Experience, an enjoyable noncredit program exploring careers and culture in New York City • Over 1,000 undergraduate, graduate, and professional courses offered day and evening and l New York Housing available UlUVerStty May 23-August 14 NYU Summer Housing „ . . 14A Washington Place For more information New York, N Y. 10003 and an application, call toll free vu SUMMER New York University is an affirmative action/equal opportunity institution. P3SsibiHMBMBK|Mme. In History Hang Get a free deal at Dominos every time you use your HONOR! PLUSor CIRRUS card at our new ATM in the student center. Just hang onto your First Citizens ATM receipt Its good for a free Twisty Bread or Garden-Fresh Salad when you order a Dominos 1- or-more topping pizza at regular price. This offer is good for pickup or delivery at any Chapel Hill area Dominos,now through June 30,1993. See, your ATM receipts do serve a practical purpose after all. Offer valid only with First Citizens Bank receipts from the ATM located outside Daniels Student Center Store. Member FDIC. ARTS Jennifer Brett J" Concert or the Tar Heel Voices, the Extractions’ style is more relaxed and less gratuitous than their often flamboyant undergradu ate counterparts. Their lower-intensity level overall was quaint, but in “It’s So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday,” the quintet’s ultra-square swaying and snapping made their too-perfect version of the song seem to typify stereotypes about unfunky white guys. But in “Zombie Jamboree,” an a capella favorite that the Tar Heel Voices have made a staple of their repertoire, the group flat-out rocked. Although they’re about one-third the size of THV, the five voices blended and crashed and got the audience clapping along. Member Steve Austin, a junior in the dental school from Lincolnton, deliv ered one of many funny in-between song introductions. “We want y’all to smile ... we want to see your teeth,” the prospective den tist said. Austin broke any ice that might have stood in the way of the group’s warm rapport with the audience by coaxing a volunteer, identified only as “the girl in the red sweater,” to sit on stage during a romantic medley of “Sea of Love/ Earth Angel/You Send Me.” Each mem ber took a turn on his knee serenading the woman, whose complexion promptly became the color of her sweater. The group originated in 1990 with four members, two of whom have since graduated, member Paul Bowman said before the show. The current members, all of whom sung in groups as under graduates, have been together since 1991, Bowman said. “There’s a huge market for a capella music in the dental and medical schools,” said Bowman, a second-year medical student from Raleigh. “A lot of people in the schools have never heard of the Clef Hangers.” Despite the backbreaking load of class, labs and exams, Bowman said the group had found time to arrange most of its own songs and even to author a few. “It’s hard when you get to medical school, and you have all this work to do, so a cappella music is a great extracur ricular activity,” he said. “For us, it’s been a hard thing to give up.” The Extractions shouldn’t give up, but rather mainstream their perfor mances and gear more toward under graduates. The group did perform once last year with the Clef Hangers, but they should offer their charm and talent to the campus at large more often. HELP WANTED Healthy individuals needed to participate in our life-saving and finan cially rewarding plasma donation programs. Immediate compenstation. Call 942-0251 or stop by SERA-TEC BIOLOGICALS 1091/2 E. FRANKLIN ST. j Employers Recruiting on Campus Date Company Majors Req. Job Grad. SYS 4-7 Belk Department Stores ANY/BA/BS RMGT M 93, ]93 P A93. 4-7 Camp Vega for Girls ANY/BA/BS RFCR O 4-8 Baby Superstore BU/BS RMGT M 93 P SPCH/BA J 93 4-8 Paul Revere Group ANY/BA/BS SALE M 93, |93 O 4-8 Smith Barney ANY/BA/BS FINN M 93 P 4-8 Technisource ANY/BA/BS SALE M 93, J 93 P 4-12 American Passage Media ANY/BA/BS GMGT P MKTG 4-12 Data Genera COMP/BS/MS SOFT M 93,193 P COMP/PHD A93, D93 4-14 Dataflow Companies ANY/BA/BS MIS D92, M 93 P 4-15 SALE J 93, A93 PROG / TSMK / / 4-14 Springs Industries INDR/BA PERR M 93, J 93 P 4-16 Norwest Financial BU/BS FINN J 93 O \ ECON/BA V INDR/BA 4-20 Reeds Jewelers ANY/BA/BS MKTG M 93, J 93, A P RMGT SALE 4-20 Trone Advertising ANY>SA/BS ADVT D93, M 94, O MKTG J 94, A94 SYS CODES: P (Prescreen), O (Open Sign-Up) Campus Calendar WEDNESDAY 9:30 a on. UNC Band and Alpha Phi Omega will sponsor a blood drive in Great Hall. NOON Women’s Studies Lunchtime Colloquium presents Kary Musiello and Natalie Harrington of the UNC School of Public Health, Environmental Science and Engineering speaking on “Women in Science” in Dey Hall’s Toy Lounge. For more information, call 962-3908. The Black Faculty/Staff Caucus will hold its general body meeting in 212 Peabody Hall. 2 p.m. University Career Services will sponsor Job Hunt 100 for Juniors in 209 Hanes Hall. Get prepared for senior year early. UCS will sponsor Job Hunt 104: Expanding your Job Search—learning how to conduct the job hunt on and off campus for seniors and graduate students in 306 Hanes Hall. 3:30 p.m. UCS will sponsor a Career Services Interns interest meeting in 306 Hanes for those inter ested in an on-campus internship for academic credit during the 1993-94 school year. 4 p.m. Office of International Programs-Study Abroad will sponsor an information session on study abroad in Maastricht with Oaire Kluyfhout in 12 Caldwell Hall. Women’s Studies will sponsor a party in honor of women’s studies majors, minors and certificate re cipients until 6 p.m. in Battle House. For more infor mation, call 962-3908. The Writing Center will hold a writing workshop on writing a literature essay in Greenlaw 222 until 5 p.m. Call 962-7710 for more information. 5 p.m. UNC Vegetarian Club will sponsor a free vegetarian dinner at McCorkle Place across from the Franklin Street post office. 5:30 p.m. Newman Center will have dinner and a program by Fr. Ed titled ‘The Sacred Triduum.” 6 p.m. Wesley Foundation will have dinner and a talent show. 7 pjn. UNC Pre-Law Club will have a meeting with Susan Ehringhaus of University Counsel in 206 Union. SNCAE will hold a meeting to elect officers in Peabody 220. AEESEC will host a forum on international trade issues titled “How will NAFTA affect N.C. trade?’ in Greenlaw 101. 7:30 p.m. School of Journalism and Women’s Studies will sponsor Mary Zepemick, the national president of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, speaking on ‘The News Media: Truth-telling or Myth-making in the Fourth Estate?’ in Dey Hall’s Toy Lounge. For more information, call 942-7005. BISA will present the Jai ’ 'eldon Johnson musical, “God’s Trombones. s in Chase Hall. 8 p.m. Muslim Students tion will spon sor a lecture! titled “Promin. ,en in Islam” by Ama Shabazz in Room 220 ot uie Union. 9 pjn. WXYC 893 FM will spotlight Trailer Park Music, hosted by Pat Anders and Kevin Kruse, for its Wednesday Night Feature. The show will last until midnight Circulation from page 1 them for $3.95 a piece at their Univer sity Mall location. We confiscated most of their papers Tuesday night. At 10:30 a.m.we decided to run the presses again. By 2 p.m., 17,000 addi tional papers arrived on campus. The second press run, which upped the Tues day circulation to a record 37,000, cost the paper more than $2,000. We had hoped the additional papers would satisfy the violent desires of our readers. But by 4:30 p.m., all the avail able papers were gone, and people con tinued to flood our office for more. There was little we could do to moni tor the numbers of papers people were taking. And we can’t afford to print an endless amount of papers. We apolo gize for the inconvenience. But there is much to look forward to: ■ Beginning today, Student Stores is selling T-shirts emblazoned with Tuesday’s front page in full color. ■ Next week, we’ll publish a special magazine detailing the Tar Heels’ bril liant run through the 1993 NCAA Tour nament. Watch the DTH for details. Peter Wallsten, editor Welcome from page 1 but he cut it short when Montross began to pantomime playing the violin behind him. The underclassmen on the team prom ised more success in the near future. “I’d 1 ike to take this time to thank you for coming out here, and next year, we’ll do it again,” freshman red-shirt Serge Zwikker said. Added freshman Dante Calabria, “I’d love to see you this time next year.” Freshman Larry Davis upped the ante, “I’d just like to say we’re not going to just do it again next year, we’re going to do it the year after that and the year after that.” And finally, freshman Ed Geth said, “Hopefully, we’ll bring back four or five more national championships.” Junior Kevin Salvadori didn’t say much— he couldn’t. He lost his voice while celebrating on Bourbon Street. All in all, the Tar Heels looked tired. It’s been a long five months, and many expressed a desire to relax for the rest of the spring. “It’s been a long season, but the last three weeks have been the longest,” Montross said after the event. “All the emotion has come to a head, and now it’s time to relax and get our bodies back in shape.” But not before giving a few more autographs to fans who aren’t quite ready to forget the Final Four. Inauguration from page 1 The congress members who did not attend the ceremony will be sworn in at the first-meeting of the 75th Student Congress tonight. Moody opened the inauguration with a speech warning congress members about campus problems. He contrasted the mood of the celebration on Franklin Street Monday night to that of the pro black cultural center sit-in at the South Building. “Think about the difference in the atmosphere of Franklin Street versus the atmosphere of South Building,” he said. “(The Franklin Street celebration) demonstrates how traditional barriers can be broken down on a daily basis.” Moody warned the incoming con gress members and 30 audience mem bers that those who spoke out the loud est against tolerance were often the most intolerant on campus. “Those who’ve deemed it necessary to educate others (about minority is sues) are those who need to be educated themselves,” Moody said. “We need to tolerate the essence of people—includ ing their beliefs.” Copland, who already has taken an active role in campus affairs since his election in February, gave his inaugural address at the end of the ceremony. The University would be at a historic turning point during the upcoming Bi centennial year, Copland said Copland discussed the problems fac ing the University, including its slip out of the U.S. News and World Report list of the top 25 universities. “That slip is indicative of institutional suffering due to budget cuts,” Copland said. He said the University needed to commit itself to not only naming prob lems but fixing them. “We can and should applaud those aspects which make it great and not just condemn the problems, but work cre atively to improve problems,” he said. Copland said student government had lost credibility during the past few years. “We want to make our branch more inclusive and involved,” he said. Copland said that he would be in volved in providing leadership to the congress through writing of resolutions, reforming the Student Code and giving advice to congress on budget matters.. •HALF PRICE* JEWELRY SALE ON SELECT BLACK MOUNTAIh STERLING SILVER AND 14K GOLD JEWELRY NOW THROUGH APRIL 30 w Black Mountain Gallery Eastgate Shopping Center Chapel Hill, NC 967-8101 Mon-Sat 10AM-6PM
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 7, 1993, edition 1
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