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My daughter Amuh
Amy Carter makes her UNC debut
campus guide Deirdre Hampton, a
Students to discuss health insurance plan
The eighth in a series of nine public
hearings to find out what North
Carolina college students and others
think about an innovative student
health insurance proposal will be held
tomorrow at 10 a.m. in room 224 of
the Union.
The proposal, designed by Dr.
wiiiiam rv. ivicR.ae, director 01 student
health services at the University of
North Carolina at Greensboro, would
allow prepaid college and university
student health fees to satisfy the
deductible of a student's private health
Student Television Viewing
Schedule
for the week of Oct. 24-30
7 p.m. Carolina Bodyworks A
complete aerobic workout.
7:30 & 9:30 p.m. Campus Profile
Feature-on nWXYGy -Parking
segment Part II, 'Seating; in Activ
ities Center, Speakout on Manda
tory Mealplan.
8 & 10 p.m. This is It Jimmy
Carter, "Rockin Autumn," Student
Film, and Saturday's Victory.
Campus Calendar
The Carolina Student FundDTH
Campus Calendar will appear daily.
Announcements to be run in the
expanded version on Mondays and
Thursdays must be placed in the box
outside the Carolina Student Fund office
on the third floor of South Building by
3 p.m. Friday and 3 p.m. Wednesday,
respectively. The deadlines for the
limited editions will be noon one day
before the announcement is to run. Only
announcements from University recog
nized and campus organizations will be
printed.
Wednesday
3 p.m. Association of Business Stu
dents career planning commit
tee meeting in T-l New Carroll.
Selecting a Major workshop in
204 Steele. Sign-up in 209
Steele.
Association of Business Stu
dents Career Planning Commit
tee meeting in T-l New Carroll.
4 p.m. Sir John Vane, Nobel Laureate
in Medicine, will speak in the
Clinic Auditorium at the School
of Medicine.
Pre-Law Club meeting to dis
cuss Law Forum in the Union.
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on the steps of South Building yesterday, with APO fraternity member and
junior from Jamestown, N.C. Carter plansld 'major in the sciences.
insurance policy, something done at no
university in the country today, accord
ing to Student Government Executive
Vice President Mark Scurria.
The hearing will consist of testimony
for and against the proposal. According
to Scurria, Vice Chancellor for Student
Affairs Donald Boulton will open the
3mLT
Carter said the Reagan administra
tion should withdraw its troops from
Honduras and try to encourage demo
cratic rule in Nicaragua rather than to
overthrow the Sandinista government.
"During my term as president,
Congress approved $65 million in aid
to Nicaraguan juntas to establish
democratic rule during the Somoza
regime so they wouldn't have to turn
to Havana or Moscow for aid," he said.
"But Reagan has launched a military
campaign to overthrow the Sandinista
government. They have a long way to
go in human rights, but they are not
yet a socialist or communist govern
ment. "
Carter also said he supported the
separation of church and state and
opposed attatTmaftdtsqqh,?
prayer me.ndinent Jspite, . jiis j strong
Southern 1Bapte9manW,t -io.-.w
Concluding his speech, Carter said he
wanted to make sure the nation's
strength would be used to create peace,
human rights, elimination of hatred and
the development of compassion and
Carter also accused the Reagan
administration of being too friendly
5 p.m. Association of Business Stu
dents social committee meeting
in T-2 New Carroll.
International Center presents
speaker on "Foriegn Policy and
the Presidential Election: What
the Next Four Years Will
Bring" at the International
Center.
6:30 p.m. UNC 4-H Club meeting in the
Union.
7 p.m. Carolina Gay Association
LAMBDA Newsletter Staff
meeting in 230 Union.
Carolina Students for Hunt
final pre-election meeting in 1 1 1
Murphey.
Men's Volleyball Club practice
in Fetzer Gym A.
8 p.m. UNC D&D and Gaming Club
in 210 Union. ...
10 p.m. Anglican StHdent Fellowship
H6ly Communion at Chapel of
, .: theJiross. '
I
Items of Interest
Internship in Japan with Boards of
Education. Applications at the Interna
tional Center. Deadline November 5.
Alpha Epsilon Delta will have a blood
pressure check.bdotbin the pit from 10:30
a.m.-l p.m.
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m in
DTHCharies Ledlord
hearing. Also, several campus leaders,
including Residence Hall Association
President Mark Stafford, Black Student
Movement President Sherrod Banks
and Student Body President Paul
Parker will offer testimony at the
hearing. Interested students are urged
to attend and express concerns.
from page 1
with the Republic of South Africa,
which Carter said is an endorsement of
the apartheid system.
Terrorism can be avoided by accurate
security measures which he said were
not used in the three Beirut bombings
at the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon. "And
we shouldn't perform acts of terrorism
ourselves," he said, interrupted by
applause, "as we have done recently in
Nicaragua."
Asked about the reasons for the great
surge in Republican voter registration
among young people, Carter said the
Reagan image and philosophy of
'everything's okay no one needs to
worry about nuclear war, arms control,'
a good media-molded image and a sense
of gratification over strong military
rnlht1 had buiit support:- - ; - i '
v Kfcu, . f ; 1 1 v i 'sibno V ,
...These are.jall Reasons and legit-i
imate ones and the country is
enjoying economic prosperity," he said,
which drew scattered applause from
apparent Reagan supporters. "But a lot
of it is brought about in a false fashion
we're spending more than we're
taking in each day."
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U
Survey deals with
By RACHEL STIFFLER
Staff Writer
Five members of a Speech 55 class
are conducting a survey on campus in
an effort to compare off-campus to on
campus housing and to find ways to
better inform students of their off
campus options.
So far, after surveying 68 students in
two different General College perspec
tive classes, results show many students
dissatisfied with life in the dorm.
Some of the questions asked of the
students on the survey included where
they live, how much their rent is, what
they get for the amount of money they
are paying and their opinion of what
they "get" for their money. The survey
also attempts to find out how much
students know about off-campus
housing.
The range of students surveyed covers
freshmen to seniors ages 17 up to
25 a pretty good sampling, accord
ing to group member Vikki Barrett, a
junior from Springfield, Va.
"We found that in a lot of cases,
students are not really satisfied with
dorm life," said Krystin Hoehl, a junior
from Essex Junction, Vt., who is a
member of the group. She said bad
roommates and noise were common
complaints. Another problem the large
number of tripled room situations
among freshmen on campus. "One girl
said no freshmen should be tripled
that it should be only upperclassmen
who have already adjusted to college,"
Hoehl said.
Fordham
By LORRY WILLIAMS
SUIT Writer
"Breakfast with the Chancellor" to be
held tomorrow morning will be the first
in a series of monthly breakfasts
between University officials and stu
dents, said Stan Campbell, associate
director of the Carolina Student Fund.
A CSF project, the breakfast is
designed to give students the opportun
ity to sit down and meet with Chancellor
Christopher C. Fordham on an infor
mal basis.
The buffet-style breakfast is sche
duled for 7:45 a.m. to 9 a.m. Thursday
in Lenoir Hall and will be paid for by
the CSF. Twenty students chosen at
random from applications turned in to
CSF will attend.
The goal of CSF is to give students
who do not ordinarily come into contact
with the Chancellor an opportunity to
meet him. "It is also an opportunity for
him (Fordham) to get to know them,"
Campbell said.
t Campbell said, the idea.at.pF is that
the ,, studnt. Jeaes; ,rp.n r .campus .are,
usually the ones to taik to Fordham
on a regular basis. He said the breakfast
would allow anyone who filled out an
application the chance to meet him.
"This will give students a chance to
talk to someone who has great effect
on the University," said Marc Wright,
Informational Meeting
"owe
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Thursday, October 25th
3:30 pm-5:30 pm
Toy Lounge, Dey Hall
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Group member Kathie Bright, a
senior from Long Island, N.Y., said the
surveys she has observed so far indicate
many students living in dorms do not
know what their rent is but are not
satisfied with what they are getting for
their money. "People living in apart
ments seemed to be more satisfied," she
said.
Many students are also not satisfied
with the University's efforts to help
them find off campus housing. "Most
students didn't think they got sufficient
information on the housing opportun
ities that they could have," Barrett said:
"People don't know where to go (for
information)," Bright said. "They don't
know that in Carr Building there is a
bulletin board (with information on off
campus housing posted on it). Some
people get shut out of the dorms and
don't know what to do."
Bright also said a lot of students did
not understand the procedures for living
on their own in an apartment. "A lot
of people don't understand leases and
subletting," she said.
"A lot of people believe that living
off-campus is a lot more expensive than
on-campus housing, but we believe
differently," Hoehl said. Bright said her
own apartment rent was only slightly
higher than' her dorm room rent had
been.
The five students in the group want
to publish their findings, along with a
listing of off-campus housing options
(complete with telephone numbers of
apartment complexes), in a separate
to meet with students
a member of CSF.
A breakfast meeting was chosen
because most students' evenings are
taken up with studying or other activ
ities, Campbell said. He said Thursday
was chosen so people with 9:30 a.m.
classes would be able to attend the
breakfast and not miss class.
"We tried to find a time that would
allow the greatest number of people to
attend," Campbell said.
One of the reasons the Chancellor
was chosen for the first breakfast was
because other members of the admin
istration are not as accessible for a
social, casual-type meeting, Wright
said.
He also said the breakfast was not
publicized a great deal because CSF
members had wanted to make it later
in the semester.
"We found that this time was much
more convenient for the Chancellor so
we decided to go ahead with it," Wright
said.
He called the breakfast an "experi
mental , outing" tc see what kindldf
response it woula get without a Jot of
publicity. Wright said there should be
no trouble getting 20 students for the
breakfast.
"The first day alone we had 35
applications go out," he said.
University Dining Services will cater
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qualify for a full ?
school. Handle diverse patient casesl And
tfie worry out of pay?
work with sophisticated medical technology.
After araduation,
Health Professions ,
depends on the reguirements of the service
covers most of your
selected and the years of scholarship
required books, and
assistance received
more than $600 a
be a military doctor
school
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fcra Physician's
Best of all, you
Army,. Navy or Air
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Ercigrt, You serve 45
Don't wait to get
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falJa can help pay my medical school expenses. I understand there is no obligat
Mail this coupon to: Armed Forces Scholarships, P.O. Box 1776,
HuntSngton Station, NY 1 1 746-21 02
Check up to three: ARMY- NAVY AIR FORCE
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Please print all information clearly and completely.
Middle Initial
Last
.Apt. .
.State-
Soc. Sec. No.
Number
Birth
Date
The information you voluntarily provide will be used lor recruiting purposes only. The more
can respond to your request. (Authority: 10, USC 503 )
Heel Wednesday, October 24, 19843
off-campus life
section of the housing booklet mailed
to incoming freshmen each summer.
The information would also describe
condominium and trailer park options.
Bright said this information might help
to alleviate the fears of parents who
consider living off campus a great evil.
They have also discussed plans for
possibly publishing a pamphlet contain
ing off campus housing information and
a listing of telephone numbers and
quotes from students in both on and
off campus housing about the pros and
cons of their lifestyle. This pamphlet
would be distributed to the RAs, and
possibly to the students themselves,
depending on how much funding the
group is able to obtain from the
University and outside sources.
Hoehl said the group has planned to
get more insight into students' feelings
on the matter by going into dorms and
visiting apartments to talk to students
about whether they are happy in their
living situation and about the particular
problems they face.
The group will also try to provide
information , on the bus system to let
students know they do not have to
disregard the off campus housing option
simply because they do not own a car,
Bright said. She said the students also
need to know that they do not have
to share an apartment with another
person in order to find housing.
"We're not trying to decide which (on
or off campus housing) is better," Hoehl
said. "We're just trying to make is as
easy as possible so they (the students)
can decide what's best for them."
the breakfast. Both Wright and Camp
bell said ARA had done a good job
at making sure the students would enjoy
the meal.
The breakfast is sponsored by CSF,
the Chancellor's office and University
Dining Services.
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(3 year minimum). You'l
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paid.
the facts. Mail the
There is no obligation.
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