V r 12 AThe Daily Tar HcclMonday, August 24, 1981 V vbJfil (Boiriminriiititee HKomioKBes By ANN PETERS DTII Surf Writer . Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III has approved the nomination of 28 students to 12 Chancellor Advisory Com mutes, Student Body President Scott Norberg said last week. These committees give students a chance to affect University policy decisions, Norberg said. Norberg is responsible for recommending students to the chancellor committees and the four Vice Chancellor's Com mittees which are staffed by faculty, administrators and stu dents. These committees recommend policy decisions to the Chancellor. . "Student membership is a vital, active and equal partner in the discussions of a committee,' Norberg said. The students on the committees are appointed by Fordham on the recommendation of Norberg, with the advice of Donald Boulton, vice chancellor for Student Affairs. But recommen dations for the vice chancellor's committees are given directly to the vice chancellors responsible for the committees. The vice chancellors' committees are headed by John Tem ple, vice chancellor of Business and Finance, who is responsi ble for food service and student stores committees and Boulton, who is responsible for the Student Health Ad ministration Committee and the Housing Advisory Board. Larger issues of students will concern the vice chancellor's committees, Norberg said. He made recommendations for these committees to Boulton and Temple this week. More than 100 applications were received from students last spring. . : About 70 percent of the students were chosen from the ap plications, while about 30 percent were chosen from students who would "contribute to the diversity and represen tativeness of the students on the committees," he said. "Each recommendation must be very well qualified, very interested and as a group, the student appointed to each committee should be representative of the student body to express a variety of opinions held in the student body," Norberg said. "In many cases, these committees are where the major decisions on campus are made, where students, faculty and administration get together and agree on policy ideas."' . ' y.. . The chancellor comneesfocmJKiiihje following areas: energy; parking and transportation; student conduct; awards; scholarship, awards, Gainst talent aid; faculty building and grounds, cajertdareestablished lectures; space; traffic appeals; facilities use; and status of minorities and dis advantaged students. T ,7f , . Norberg said he believed the Committee on the Status of Minorities and Disadvantaged Students was a model com mittee that was very open to student suggestions. Norberg said the committee was one in which he was in terested and to which he was dedicated. The committee's main contribution has been to recommend the position of Vice Chancellor for University Affairs. "The cornmittee is a good, high-powered, productive committee," he said. Donald Beeson, director of food service, student stores, student health services and financial aid committees, and coordinator of these vice chancellor's committees, is a member of the Vice Chancellor's Student Stores Committee. Beeson said students had an effect on the committees and the policy decisions, when their suggestions were credible. This year, the committee on parking and transportation has succeeded in recommending that standard parking fines be reduced from $20 to $10. "When the committees recommend . something, that's usually what's done," Norberg said. . Student appointments to the Chancellor Committees: Energy Parking and Transportation Gregory Kats Dale Hamby Sally Hadden Joel Hughey Leslie Peyton Claude Allen Status of Minorities and Disadvantaged Students Keith Williams Bobby Hassell Teresa Artis Student Conduct Awards Scholarship, Awards, Student Aid Faculty Building and Grounds , Calendar Committee Established Lectures Spaces Traffic Appeals Facilities Use Bill Kimball Andrea Stumpf Cheryl Bryant Hadley Callaway Mark Carpenter Julie Hudson Ellen Starr John Goodwin Mark Canady Greg Kutrow Ruthie Leaver Chris Boulton Karen Parker Jeff Koeze Cynthia Vogler T.C. Collier Rodney Rice No appointments Timothy Taylor Andy Garner No appointments The Space and Facilities Use committees are inactive. The facilities use policy is being re-evaluated. The policy includes solicitation policy on campus organizations. The Space com mittee allocates space to organizations when space is made available, and since space is limited, the committee has no projects. - If your place has a little too much of that lived-in look, look Into Gort Furniture Rental for a way out." " . -v c- - . :' v '. ' y Gort has every possible style that you could want, will have you all set up In time for a weekend housewarmlng party and offers ; iK both short- and long-term leases. You can even arrange to apply your rental payments towards purchasing the furniture If you find that you can't live without it. Corf is the easy (and comfortable) way to make living at college like living af home. Call now. Before your mother decides to visit. urniture Menial 400 Chapel Hill Blvd. (15-501) 929-5075 Wo make it easy to feel at home. By ELAINE McCLATCHEY DTII Staff Writer Efforts to find a private consultant to study the University Food . Service pro gram have begun, Chuck Antle, associate vice chancellor of business and finance, said last week. The Office of Student Affairs is also drawing up a survey for parents, students and faculty to gather more information, Antle said. The decision to find a private consul tant and conduct a survey was based on a recommendation made by the Food Ser vices Advisory Committee early this sum mer. The committee did not make any specific recommendations on the options for campus food service because it lacked the necessary information. The options included: off-campus Option J Renovation of the first floor of Lenoir Hall. Option K Renovation of the first and second floor of the north end of Lenoir Hall. Option L Renovation of the first floor of Lenoir Hall, the renovation of Lenoir Hall basement for the purpose of having fast-food operations and the clos ing of the Fast Break snack bar in the Carolina Union. Option T Renovation of the first floor of Lenoir Hall, the renovation of the Lenoir Hall basement to have a fast food operation, the closing of the Fast Break and the conversion of the first floor of Chase Cafeteria to a fast-food operation. Option N Renovation of the din ing area of the Pine Room only. In the report, the committee reviewed pros and cons of each option, but did not recommend one particular option. Student Body President Scott Norberg said the new committee would use the re sults of the survey and consultation to re vise its earlier options and to finish the work of the original FSAC. , Norberg said he had recommended that the survey address the feasibility of a campus food service. "Can campus food service support itself?" is a major ques tion, Norberg said. Norberg said the amount of money needed for improvements may not be jus tifiable considering the number of stu dents who use the service. Over the years, campus food service never has been very successful, Norberg said. Antle said several universities had been contacted in the search for a consultant but that no decisions had been made yet. From page 1 Brenda Allen, UNC off-campus housing coordinator, said that many students did not get apartments "because of the amount it would cost for them to pay the rent, and also because they do not have a roommate to help cover expenses." Allen said that students should keep trying to find apartments, since some people do cancel out at the last minute. "Mo.st apartments may have openings be cause of a cancellation that wasn't avail able before." "Most of the time, the student ends up with something," Allen said. There are 150 unleased apartments at Estes Park, Kingswood, Royal Park, Uni versity Lake, and Booker Creek apartments, which are owned by the same company, said Brent Bobbitt, manager of Kingswood Apartments. "We can still get a bunch more people in that don't have housing," he said. Other area apartment complexes have fewer openings. One apartment will be available at Old Well Apartments around Sept. 1 and two more will become available around Sept. 18, said receptionist Maxine Slaughter. An apartment will be available at Caro lina Apartments Sept. 15, Slaughter said. "I can't promise how long these will last," she said. v o There will be one two-bedroom apart ment available Oct. 1 at Foxcroft Apart ments, Manager Ed Keathley said. That was accounted for by an unexpected move out. Tar Heel Manor on the 1 5-501 Bypass in Carrboro is full. "We don't expect to have any (open ings) until around December," Assistant Manager Annette Evans said. . Northampton Apartments are full until November, with a waiting list numbering over 200 people, secretary Nancy Geek said. "We didn't have near enough apart ments to suit all those who wanted one," Evans said. 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