Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 13, 2006, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
4 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2006 HECTOR'S FROM PAGE 1 UNC merchandise store on Franklin Street, said he remembers when Hector’s first moved to the comer of Franklin and Henderson streets. “Hector’s has been here a long time, came just about the time that I moved here in the ’6os," he said. “It’s a real nice place." The move comes as a result of plans by East End Martini Bar, which operates the building’s ground and basement floors, to expand its business into the res taurant’s space. By late March, the martini bar intends to turn the third-floor space into a dance club. Bautista said Hector’s plans to move just around the corner to 108 Henderson St. within the next few months, pending an agreement with the original owner. However, there is no set time line for opening the new location. Paliouras Enterprise Inc. owns the building and the property rights to the name Hector’s, and Bautista said they are in negotia tions about the name. “If we don’t have any solution with the original owner, we’ll just change the name,” he said. For some who eat at Hector’s, the name means little compared with the food. Sam Reynolds, a sophomore at Chapel Hill High School, who was at Hector’s Saturday morning, said he eats there twice a week and did not know the restaurant was moving. “It’s a little bit inconvenient to have to go somewhere else, but I’ll still go here because the food is good.” Contact the City Editor at citydesk@unc.edu. (bus) (bike) (ride - — —- with i^lg friends) I, Mg *} * ;M>. • l m/*tl P|L,. W R 8k jMSfey tv Try our new line of air fresheners. redefine the way you travel www.redefinetravel.org EO/ADA FROM PAGE 1 ADA and experience especially on a college campus,” Jablonski said. The Americans with Disabilities Act was passed in 1990 and prohibits discrimination based on an individ ual’s disability, according to the U.S. Department of Justice’s Web site. The law’s effects range from housing and public transportation to hiring policies and workplace safety. The committee received 80 appli cations for the position and contin ued to take applications until the position was filled, Jablonski said. “We conducted phone interviews with eight or nine people,” she said. “We chose the ones that looked best on paper.” The committee then narrowed the field down to five applicants, she said. Penn came to campus Dec. 15 for a candidate forum, a discus sion during which faculty, staff and students could ask questions about her experience and her ideas for UNC. Four other forums were held throughout November and December, Jablonski said. “These candidates were the ones with the most direct, comparable experience to the role of the EO/ ADA officer,” Jablonski said. Members of the search com mittee and others with whom the candidates met gave their feedback about the process based on the phone interviews and forums. Once the committee reached a consensus, they made their recom mendation to Chancellor James Moeser, who made the final deci sion. Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu. From Page One TUITION FROM PAGE 1 from certain. Erskine Bowles, who became president of the UNC system in January, said he has one overrid ing concern about a policy that would allow for regular increases in campus-based tuition. “I believe it’s critical for us to make sure we don’t inadvertently do anything that would cause the legislature to be disincentivized from supporting us because they felt they could rely on tuition as a substitute for legislative dollars that we might get,” he told the board. The relationship between tuition hikes and state appropriations has figured prominently in BOG dis- SBP RACE FROM PAGE 1 to other University administrators, notably his father, and about his relationship with Calabria. Those ideas have loomed over this year’s race. Calabria and Allred have sug gested that Holloway’s ambition gets in the way of his ability to lead. Holloway’s camp suggests that Calabria’s accusations are untrue and that he might have cap italized on his rocky relationship with Holloway to install Allred —a “prodigal son,” in Holloway’s words —as secretary. A forced resignation By late August, just two weeks after school had started, things had gone sour between Calabria and Holloway. Specifically, Calabria and his officer corps were angry that Holloway had told the DTH about a “constituent response system” that they hadn’t heard about. According to a letter to the DTH that was never sent or published but that outlines the reasons for Holloway’s forced resignation, many student leaders also became angry when they read about the constituent response system in the newspaper. Many of them had been named as participants even though they had never heard of the system leading Calabria’s officer corps to With Lovefrom Baum 5... BAUM Complimentary Amethyst DI AM OND S Stop by soon! ...n k•. K.,. i Hill -i. ...... cussions in years past. Ever since the adoption of campus-initiated tuition increases in 1999, system leaders have scrutinized how their choices about tuition might affect budget decisions in the N.C. General Assembly. Bowles’ announcement made clear that system officials will have to evaluate carefully how any new tuition policy might alter the perception of legislators. Board members stressed that the legis lature has been generous to the university. “You don’t want to create a for mula where the General Assembly can, by inaction I guess, cause tuition to go up,” said board chair man Brad Wilson. Jim Phillips, who led the budget and finance committee during last determine that Holloway had done only minimal work on the project. In a recent interview Calabria explained why he became so upset with Holloway at the time. “It is irresponsible to lie to the DTH,” he said, “but even worse to lie to those you’re working with and for.” Holloway says that his work on the system was an outgrowth of his work on Calabria’s platform and that the DTH misrepresented the progress he’d made. It was “in progress, ongoing stuff,” he said, and Calabria’s officers didn’t seem to understand that. “Their questioning quickly turned into interrogation of my motives,” Holloway said. “It made me uncomfortable.” That night, Calabria told Holloway he would have to resign unless he owned up to his behav ior and changed some of what Calabria said were his negative habits including taking credit for others’ actions, neglecting Student Code updates, being dis honest toward others and unlock ing the doors to officers’ offices. It was a unanimous choice among the officers. Holloway stepped down Sept. 20. He says Calabria didn’t talk to him about his complaints before asking him to step down. “I didn’t do anything wrong,” he said. “But it wouldn’t have been endy P. & 219 Hants Hall Dean F. Painter Jr. yt jYJ{|l •! 919-962-6507 Career Center ucs(fl unc.ttlu WALK-IN HOURS: Answers to quick career questions and resume reviews—Mon-Fri, 10am- 3pm 3 ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS f There will be no resume submission during the week of February 13th for the week of March 13-17 Ferguson Enterprises Inc: 2/20/2006, 5:00 PM-6:00 PM, 2398 Hanes Hall IBM: 2/21/2006, 5:00 PM-6:00 PM, 2398 Hanes Hall NVR/Ryan Homes: 2/22/2006, 7:00 PM-8:00 PM, 08 Gardner Hall NC Public Interest Research Group: 2/22/2006, 6:30 PM-7:30 PM, 104 Murphey Hall Semester In Washington: 2/22/2006, 6:00 PM-7:00 PM, 2398 Hanes Hall BPBCIAL PROORAMS 1 EXPLORE! DECIDE! PLAN!: USING UCS TO CHOOSE A MAJOR AND CAREER: Students are given an overview of the career decision-making process and will learn how to clarify their major or career direction. Participants will also leam about career resources and |. have the opportunity to take an interest inventory online after the session. Sign up for this workshop online at http://careers.unc.edu/careers_explore.html or call 962-6507. 2/14/2006, 12:30 PM-1:30 PM, 239 B Hanes Hall USING UCS FOR YOUR INTERNSHIP SEARCH: Learn how to find an internship, search f the UCS online database, and decide which internship is best for you. 2/16/2006, 2:00 PM, 239 B Hanes Hall NETWORKING NIGHTS RSVP online at http://careers.unc.edß/events/register.html to attend Networking Nights ADVERTISING/PUBLIC RELATIONS/MARKETING . 2-16-06, 5:30 PM-7:00 PM, Great Hall . V* ± A r I SAVE THE DATE! NETWORKING NIGHTS BIOTECHNOLOGY/SCIENCE CAREERS 2-23-06, 6:00 PM-7:30 PM, 239 B Hanes Hall FAIRS SPRING JOB FAIR I ®®®®o 3/29/2006, 1:00 PM-4:30 PM, Great Hall, Student Union ®®®o® Reminder! There is a Resource Room available for your use at University Career Services. We have information to f ; help you with your career search! We are located on the second floor of Hanes Hall. Come check us out! : ■1: http://careers.unc.edu 'UCS>Y I 2: “Create an Account” || 3: Fitter PI I)# and complete profile Programs open to UNC students with the exception of MBA, MAC, Law, Medicine or Dentistry students. Individuals in these programs are served by separate career offices. -Clip and save ——Clip and save Clip and save year’s tuition process, said there always has been concern about balancing the genuine needs of the system with the state’s ability to pay. Using tuition hikes to account for limited state funding could cause legislators to feel less urgen cy about funding higher education, he said. At the same time, many board members think the system has to demonstrate a willingness to pay for some its own priori ties, and Phillips said balancing those competing concerns can be tough. “Take last year’s decision not to raise tuition at all, which was roundly praised by students and the press, and the leadership of the General Assembly was very worth it to sit there and work with four people who didn’t want to work with me.” Lingering questions Those four people Calabria, Student Body Vice President Alexa Kleysteuber, Chief of Staff Tre Jones and Treasurer Natalie Russell were more than happy to work with Allred. “I’m not usually the type who’s going to park the proverbial car in the Pit,” Allred said, comparing himself with Holloway. (Former Student Body President Justin Young once parked a car in the Pit to protest what he thought were unfair student parking policies.) But the degree to which Allred has acted for himself has come under question. During campaign forums questioners have asked Allred about his relationship with his father, Steve, UNC’s executive associate provost. And Holloway suggested in an interview that James Allred’s unwillingness to push buttons helped him in the secretary post. Allred says he’s willing to stand up to his father on issues ranging from tuition to funding for the C START student-teaching program. “I’ve never had a problem cri tiquing my father,” he said, adding that the two have learned to sepa rate their work life from their fam ily life. When the Calabria admin- Saihj ®ar Bpri “It gives the impression that that University is going to charge just as much as it can.” RAY FARRIS, BOG MEMBER unhappy,” he said. “There are a lot of different constituencies that care about how this university oper ates.” The job of crafting a long-term tuition policy that will satisfy those constituencies has been put on hold at least until April. Contact the State id National Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu. istration prepared its presentation to the Board of TYustees last year opposing the administration’s tuition plan, Allred said, that pitted him directly against his father, who helped to defend that plan. There are also questions about how much Calabria’s friends, including Allred, knew about Holloway’s resignation —and how much they kept quiet. Allred told the DTH that when he applied for the secretary position, he thought Holloway had resigned for personal reasons. It wasn’t until later, he said, that he came to know that Holloway had been asked to step down. Even now, Allred said, he doesn’t know most of the details. “I’m sorry to disappoint you, but I really don’t know almost anything,” he said. The other people who got an inter view for the secretary post DTH columnist Ginny Franks, Student Congress Rep. Anisa Mohanty and Brian Phelps knew Holloway had been asked to resign, but they weren’t sure about the details, Mohanty said. She also confirmed that Allred didn’t know what had happened until after he took office. Two people close to the Calabria administration at the time sug gested tljat it’s highly unlikely that Allred didn’t know what had happened, but both Mohanty and Allred said that’s not the case. Mohanty saw no need to tell Allred what had happened, she said, because she ran in the same circle of friends as him and thought he would find out what had happened. Contact the University Editor atudesk@unc.edu. -Clip and save —- ———Clip and save — Clip and save
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 13, 2006, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75