Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 1, 1983, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, December 1, 1983The Daily Tar Heel3 On Campus Student injured... A UNC student apparently fell from the 5th floor of Morrison Dormitory early Wednesday, according to unofficial reports. Timothy Humanik, a freshman from Charlotte, was listed in serious condi tion Wednesday, said Sid Mitchell, ad ministrator on call at North Carolina Memorial Hospital. He was expected to undergo surgery Wednesday night, Mitchell said. University Police could not be reach ed for verification, but Lt. Ralph Pen dergraph of the Chapel Hill Police Department said the Chapel Hill Po lice responded to the call as emergency medical service providers. New systems. . .new photocopy sys tem will be installed in the Health-Sciences library beginning this January. The primary feature of the new system is that coins will no longer be needed to operate it. Instead, a plastic, mag netically coded "Vendacard" will be available from a vending machine on the ground floor of the library. 11k. card can be inserted into the copier in stead of coins. With the card, a user can make 21 copies (an average of 4.76 cents per copy.) Once again . . . John P. Evans, pro fessor of business administration, was reappointed to a second five-year term as dean of the UNC School of Busi ness Administration. The new term begins April 20. Fifteen attend meeting Dorm integration and race relations discussed By HEIDI OWEN Staff Wriler Dorm integration and race relations in general were the topics discussed at the Chancellor's Committee meeting on race relations in Rosenau Hall Wednesday. Three faculty members and 12 students attended the meeting, chaired by William Small, assistant dean of public health. Student task forces concerned not only with racial in tegration but also with the problem of racial separation in general voiced their opinions for the committee to report to the Administrative Council in February. "There is definite concern about the racial problem in dormitories," Small said. He was backed by statements from Jennifer Ayer, coordinator of People Acting Against Racism, as well as other students at the meeting. "There is clearly a disprdportionment of representa tion of black students on campus," Small said. Anna Giattina, who wrote her honors thesis on UNC housing, said that in the past, various institutional mechanisms within the system played a role in the separation of races and as a result the black population built up on South Campus. Now students have a preference in dorm choice, but the majority of blacks desire to be on South Campus," Chancellor's Committee member James Exum said. "It's really a matter of comfort and security," Kevin Jones, a member of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, said. "Many blacks don't feel comfortable in a situation such as the one on North Campus." Angie Robbins, chairman of the Student Government task force, expressed three alternatives to the present situation. "You can't change attitudes simply by changing someone's dorm," Robbins said. "Three alternatives could be a step in the direction of changing previous at titudes: the roommate questionnaire could be extended, i lentation anu oucmauon could be integrated, and more cultural programs could be provided on North Campus." The consensus at the meeting was that there were essentially two problems on the University Campus: what to do with the black students on North Campus to make them feel more comfortable and how to integrate more black into North Campus. Giattina said she believed that in order to accomplish this integration "we must create incentives for blacks to move from South Campus and we must provide the mechanisms to do it." Small said, "Blacks are as diverse as whites in their backgrounds, and you can't put the opinion of any of us into one pot. The University is a microcosm of a greater society." The committee agreed to address the issues of both housing integration and the situation of the American Indians on campus in their report. film From page 1 FPG From page 1 "1 support his decision completely," Friday said. "That's his responsibility, and I certainly support him." Student reaction to the' decision was mixed. "If it weren't during exams, it seems like it would be a lot of fun for everyone to get in volved in,"Ashley Tate, a freshman business administration major from Charlotte, said. "I can see why he (Fordham) opposed it because it would cause some disruption in the school." David Creech, a senior RTVMP major from Hendersonville, viewed the decision in a dif ferent perspective. "I wouldn't say his decision is wrong," he said. "I don't think that the assumption that the filming would be disruptive is right. The film isn't going to get in students' way. I think that it will increase excitement within the Uni versity." Filming has taken place on campus before. Corporations such as Pepsico Inc. have shot commercials on campus, Tillman said. How ever, the filming was generally done after class hours and as unobtrusively as possible, Till man said. Both Tillman and Bonus said that the Univer sity's refusal should not negatively affect North Carolina filmmaking. "I don't think this will affect filmmaking in North Carolina," Tillman said. "We still have the weather and the scenery. We have the mountains and the beaches, and I don't think this decision will hurt the North Carolina film industry one single bit." scores on ability tests showed that children in the day-care program had higher marks on verbal and perceptual-performance testing ac cording to a center news brief. Another indirect change noted in the Abece darian Research Project was that mothers of the high-risk children in the program generally moved into a higher-skilled job than mothers whose children were not in the program. i tie teachers and statt at the tfU Center are well-trained and most have been there more than five years, Mansfield said. "But more than this, we all have a concern and an ability to work and understand children." But the center is not all work and no play; it offers a toy-lending library where children can check out toys and games. This, Mansfield said, is to help parent-child interaction at home. H ) delivers alloon Boticmets to special people for special occasions. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 1, 1983, edition 1
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