10AThe Daily Tar HeelMonday, August 23. 1982
M "-.-lines
Tut Weel media . ? :
'Yackety Yack' to. paper rac
1 thos
Carolina offers great
By MARY EVANS
Staff Writer
Students at UNC this year will be
able to find a diversified assortment
of literary magazines and newspapers
as well as radio and television stations
to meet their varying needs and in
terests. Most of the media organizations
on campus are run by students and
welcome those interested in working
or in making contributions. , ' '
The Carolina Quarterly is a literary
magazine that publishes fiction,
poetry and photography from all over
the world. The Quarterly is published
three times a year, and is available at
the Student Stores for $4 an issue.
The Quarterly receives a variety of
funding, including grants from the
North Carolina Arts Council, the
National Endowment of Humani
ties, library subscriptions, individual
patrons and student fees. , The
Carolina Quarterly office is located
in Greenlaw Building.
The Cellar Door publishes poetry,
prose and graphic works in a
magazine format. All staff members
and contributors are students. -,
The magazine is published once a
semester, and is sold door to door," in
the Carolina Union and in the Bull's
' Head bookshop in the Student Store.
The Cellar Door is partially financed
with student fees and funds from
patrons.
Applications for staff positions, on
the Cellar Door are being accepted
through Sept. 3, and contributions
will be accepted through Sept. 20.
The Cellar Door office is located in
room 108-A in the Carolina Union.
The Black Ink is a bi-weekly
newspaper and the official voice of
the Black Student Movement. The
Black Ink covers the activities of the
BSM and in addition to all events and
issues that concern blacks, both on
campus and in the community.
The Black Ink is distributed at
various drop sites on campus and in
Chapel Hill. Students interested in
Vant to Maker a Difference on Campus?
k:;v'WlCV0LVED
Ml
STUDE3T GOVERnr.lEriT .
Applications are now avail
able for various positions.
See Melanie Wilson in Suite
CCarolina Union or call
962-5201 for more informa
tion. Deadline for applica
tions is Sept. 10th.
The Durham Morning Herald & The Durham Sun
DISCOUNT
on Fail Subscriptions
for STUDENTS!!!
Our CHAPEL I SILL EJEWS BUREAU
brings you tHe best in local news,
sports & entertainment. :
Name
Addressu
Phone.
Check One:
Hersld
7 days, $10.00
Mon.-Sat., C0.OO
working on The Black Ink should at
tend an organizational meeting
scheduled for 6 p.m. Monday at the
Upendo Lounge in Chase Cafeteria.
Outside contributions also will be ac- '.
cepted. ... . - . '
The Agora is a magazine published
every other year by the Association of
International Students. The Agora.
contains fiction, poetry, art, recipes
and personal accounts of students
who have traveled abroad. -
The editorial staff and contributors
to the Agora are students, and occa
sionally articles by outside authors are
published. Students interested in con
tributing to or obtaining a copy of the
Agora should go by the International
Center in the Carolina Union.
The Yackety Yack is the University
yearbook, distributed each fall. It
chronicles the events of the previous
academic year.
The Yack is staffed entirely by
students who work in various areas of
production. Students interested in
working as photographers, writers, or
in sales and advertising for the Yack
should go by its office in room 106 in
the Carolina Union.
Funding for the Yack comes from,
individual subscriptions. Subscrip
tions for next year's Yack will be
available approximately a month
from now at a cost of $14 plus a $2
mailing charge for seniors.
The Daily Tar Heel js a daily
newspaper published every ' day
classes meet. The DTH covers cam
pus news, sports and other activities
as well as city, state and national
news.
The Daily Tar Heel is available at
no charge and is distributed in the
mornings to drop boxes located at
various spots around the campus. It is
funded with student fees. Students in
terested in working for or con-v
tributing to the DTH should call or
come by room 104 in the Carolina
Union. . -
The Phoenix is a weekly tabloid
news magazine that offers campus
news and features, as well as interviews.
(o)M
(2) m
,.: Mail Coupon with
Payment to:
. ' . Herald-Sun Papers
: - 412 W. Franklin Street
Chapel Hill. N.C. 27514
-.837-6531
SUN
Mon.-Sat., $3.00.
Sun. & Sunday Herald, $10.00
diversity
The Phoenix is located in room
10&D of the Carolina Union, and is
accepting contributions and applica
tions for staff positions.
The Phoenix is distributed to drop
boxes around campus, and is also
available in some residence halls and
classroom buildings.
; WXYC is a progressive rock sta
tion which broadcasts 24 hours a day,
365 days a year. Student disc jockeys
play a variety of contemporary music,
including pop, jazz, new wave and
experimental music. .
WXYC broadcasts on 89.3 FM,
and requests can be made by calling
962-8989. The commercial-free sta
tion is funded with student fees.
WUNC is a classical music station
which broadcasts on 91.5 FM, 19
hours a day on weekdays and 20'
hours a day on weekends.
The station recently received a Cor
poration for Public Broadcasting
award for its "Listen: '81" pledge
campaign, which raised more than 40
percent of its annual operating budget
in five days of fund raising. ,
WUNC has students who work as
volunteers at the station, and other
6Phoenixv editor
The Phoenix editor Phil Galanes has
left UNC to attend Yale University in
New Haven, Ct.
"I'm just not coming back to UNC
because I'm not coming back,"; Galanes
said in a phone interview this week. "I
wouldn't have left UNC unless I were
confident that The Phoenix would be well
taken care of."
Galanes, who was a Morehead scholar,
said he resigned the1 scholarship in June
after learning of his acceptance at Yale.
Until the Media Board selects a new
editor. Phoenix managing editor Janet
Grady will serve as editor of the weekly
publication. ,
Grady said she had been aware that
Galanes might leave since May, "It's not
' like it's been totally dropped in my lap,"
she said.
MewTJNC buUdmgs xipprc
Construction sites which seemed to be
just a pile of brick last semester are begin
ning to turn into recognizable buildings.'
The new Davis Library should be com
pleted by the beginning of 1983, said
Charlie Davis, a consultant architect for
the University. When the library will be
ready for use "depends on how fast the
University can move in," he said. It
should take three months to move in and
organize the new library, he said.
When the new library-opens, Wilson
300 W. ROSEMARY ST,
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students who work as announcers.
The WUNC office is located in Swain
-Hall.- . ' : :
The UNC Center for Public Televi
sion offers instructional television
programming from 8:30 a.m. to 4
p.m. This includes educational televi
sion, pre-school programs, and other
programs designed to serve the needs
and interests of viewers.
Galanes transfers to Yale
' ::
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Janet Grady
Library will house the Rare Book Collec
tion, the Southern Historical Collection
and the North Carolina Collection.
The r art center beside Ackland Art
Museum should be completed in a cou
ple of months, Davis said. The facilities
in this building include faculty offices, a
library, clacsrooms, studios and lecture
halls.
Work has begun on the new student ac
tivities center. The $30 million project
should be ready for the 1984-85, basket-
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The UNC television station is a
statewide network 'that presently has
eight transmitters, with a ninth
scheduled to open soon in Jackson
ville, N.C. The station can be viewed
locally on Channel 4.
The UNC Center for Public Televi
sion employs a paid student crew, and
also some students involved in the
work-study program. t
Grady also said she would apply for the
position of editor. As acting editor, her
duties will not differ much from those of
the managing editor, she said.
"It's always been the case that
everybody did whatever was necessary to
get the paper out," she said.
The Media 'Board will open applica
tions for The Phoenix position beginning
tomorrow, said Media Board Chairman
Joe Cahnady. Applicants must submit a
resume, three letters of recommendation,
and must participate in an interview ses
sion Wednesday, Sept. 8. ;
"Whoever we select will fill the re
mainder of Phil's term (through the fall
semester)," Cannady said.
ALISON DAVIS
ion
ball season. "We just started to grade
and clear the land," Davis said. An
Olympic-size pool and a practice gym will
be included in the SAC. The building will
be able to host concerts, Commencement
and other sports in addition to basketball-
The new , residence hall on Stadium
Drive is still in the design stage, as is the
Lineberger Cancer Research Center. The
chemistry building beside Venable Hall is
also still in the design stage, said Jake
Bryant, director of engineering and con
struction in the UNC Planning Depart
ment. January of 1984 is the expected
completion date for the cancer research
center.
There have also been additions to older
buildings. Three floors were added to the
Health Sciences Library, and the addition
to the School of Dentistry's office wing
was completed this summer.
MARY McKEEL
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Dressmaking and Alterations
133V2 E. Franklin St.
Chapel Hill, N.C.
929-4826
By MARY EVANS
Staff Writer
For some 300 students standing
in front of the Student Health Service .
before the doors opened last Wednesday :
morning, it $ds yet another long wait in
the lines at UNC.
Students in need of medical clearances
to register were required to go by the SHS
before they would be Allowed to proceed
with registration. "Students were very
worried about not being able to register
and everyone came down as soon as possi
ble," said Judith Cowan, SHS director.
"Everyone came early to try and beat the
crowds, and that created the problem."
SHS saw 1,280 students on Wednesday
who needed clearance on their permit-to-register
cards. Included were students who
had not had any type of physical examina
tion, about 400 students who had received
pre-clearance but whose permit-to-register
cards were hot pre-stamped and' students
who may have had incomplete informa
tion on their physical forms.
. While students had a variety of in
complete items on the physical forms, the :
single most incomplete item was the
rubella vaccine, Cowan said.
The decision to require the rubella vac
cine for all students undo- age 40 on the
entrance physical was made last year and"
was effective this fall, Cowan said.
Previously, the physical form only re
quired proof of tetanus and tuberculin im
munizations. Because the forms for physicals are
printed over a year in advance, an addi-:
1 tional rubella form was included with the
physical form that was sent to entering
students. , '
"The two separate forms were probably;
more confusing than one single form
would have been," and this may have ac
counted for the number of students who
did not include the rubella information on
their physical form, Cowan said.
Students who were missing proof of
rubella immunity were given a semester to
produce the information.
"Students were encouraged to try and
provide some type of previous immuniza
tion records if possible, because we don't
like to immunize students unnecessarily,";
Cowan said.
The decision to require the rubella vac
cine was made because of important health
reasons for adults. "Studies have shown
that in a population the size of this univer
sity, between 10 and 20 percent of the peo
ple are not immune to rubella," Cowan
said. The University suffered a rubella
epidemic in 1980.
SHS does not anticipate any problems
wiflr people complying with the rubella re
quirement by the beginning of spring
semester, Cowan said. More than 1,000
people already have some type of im
munization records that will be sent in
soon. However, those students who do not
show some type of proof of immunity will
not be allowed to register for next
semester.
Future problems with the physical forms
are already being considered, Cowan said.
SHS would like to develop a form that
would include all necessary information on
just one physical form.
SHS officials are currently in discussion
with the 16 schools in the UNC system
which use the physical form to see what
type of information would meet each
school's needs, and what changes should
be made in the form used presently.
SHS is also considering mailing students
a pre-clearance card in the summer when
their physical forms are received. "This
would let students know that verification
of their records has been received, and also
give them something to bring with them in
the fall to show proof of their pre
clearance," Cowan said.
This is the first year that the SHS has
had such a large crowd of students to line
up before the doors opened, and the first
time that it has taken so long to process all
the students through, Cowan said.
One reason for this is recent resignations
in the medical records department that left
the department unable to handle Wednes
day's tremendous flow of students.
"We are trying to understand and work
on the overcrowding problem," Cowan
said. "We don't want students to have to
wait in line, and we hope to avoid that
situation in the future."
9.35) itJui i)V ijUSGfigk'
Tues.-Fri. 8:30-4:00
Saturday 9-12