The Daily Tar HeelThursday, January 31, 19853 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 dead lines for the limited editions will be noon one day before the announce ment is to run. Only announcements from University recognized and cam- pus organizations will be printed. Thursday 11 a.m. Tips for Interviewing work shop in Hanes 107. 3 p.m. Sports Club Council financial procedure meeting with Mrs. Sparrow in the Union. 3:30 p.m. APICS organizational meet ing in New Carroll 205. Undergrad Geography Society meeting 3rd floor lounge Saunders if you can find it without a map. 7 p.m. Campus Crusade "Thursday Night Live" in the Union Auditorium. IVCF Mid-Campus "How to be Happy" in Union 224. STAND Peace Vigil until 7:30 p.m. at Franklin St. Post Office. 7:30 p.m. STAND meeting in the Y Lounge. UNC Libertarian Society Chnrter. Elections and Liber- x tanan Solutions to Subway Vigilantes in Union 211. Cycling Club Racing Team meeting in Union 213. Bring money lor shirts or ride naked! 8:30 p.m. Fellowship of Christian Ath letes presents Danny Lot of the 1957 UNC Basketball team in Union 208. Friday 1:30 p.m. Orientation Resume Writing workshop in Hanes 103. 3 p.m. AISEC Product Knowledge Training I in Union 209. 4 p.m. 5th Annual ZoIIicofer Lecture "Minorities in the Medical Profession" by Dr. Donald Wilson, State U. of NY Down state in Berryhill 103. 8 p.m. Clogging Club Square Dance at the Presbyterian Student Center, 1 10 Henderson St. Sunday 1 p.m. Ice Hockey Club skates-out against Georgia State at Daniel Boone Rink in Hills borough. For club info call 929-8181. 3 p.m. AIESEC Product Knowledge Training II in Union. 209. Items of Interest Applications for Campus Y Executive Committee positions due, Y Office. 'Phoenix' endorses Wallace; CG A backs Berger By KATY FRIDL Staff Writer The Phoenix has endorsed Patricia Wallace for student body president and Mark Pavao for Carolina Athletic Association President. The Carolina Gay Association also announced Tuesday that it will support Doug Berger for student body president and Arne Rickert and Dave Schmidt for co-editors of The Daily Tar Heel, said Robert Pharr, CGA co-chairman. . The Phoenix did not endorse a candidate for DTH editor. "For obvious reasons, we aren't endorsing any candidate for Daily Tar Heel editor," said Phoenix staffer and spokesman Chris Simmons. "To do so would be similar to allowing the president of one corporation to come in and choose the president of your own corporation," Simmons said. Rickert currently is editor of the Phoenix. "We put a lot of time into the SBP endorsement, and we feel pretty confident about it," Simmons said. "We really had a tough time, because there are a lot of good candidates." After the Carolina Union forum Sunday night, the Phoenix selected five candidates they felt were most qualified. "We brought the five in for individual interviews," Simmons said, "and then we grilled them." Dirk Marshall, Patricia Wallace and Doug Berger were the final three candidates the Phoenix debated over, Simmons said. "It was very difficult to choose one candidate from these three, because each has different strengths," he said. "Wallace is a strong choice, she has a grasp of the issues, which, combined with her Campus Governing Campus Elections Council experience and her overall attitude toward the job, won her the Phoenix endorsement," Simmons said. Berger is as well-qualified as the other candidates, Simmons said, but "we wondered if he (Berger) would involve the entire student body." Simmons said the Phoenix did not consider the $100 mandatory meal plan to be of primary importance in this SBP race. Instead, the issue of Student Government involvement in off-campus politics was a much more decisive factor in choosing Wallace over Berger, Simmons said. "That was the split," he said. "Is that '60s activism what students now want? We concluded that the student body is more concerned that Student Government run campus issues smoothly, and then address national and international issues," he said. "We looked at the way people responded to that question that pertinent campus issues should be taken care of first rather than someone who would put ideology first," Simmons said. Candidates stances on the constitutional funding of student organizations is another SBP election issue considered by the Phoenix in its endorsement of Wallace. "We wanted to see who had a grasp on the issues," he said. "The big difference between Marshall and Wallace was that we thought she would hit the ground running. "We were very impressed with Marshall's intelli gence and his logical utilization of resources when we confronted him with issues, he said. "But some had such a well-defined knowledge that it gave them an edge over the others." Pharr said the CGA decided to support Berger because members believed he would carry through on his campaign positions. "Although it was a difficult decision to make, we feel that Doug is not only making promises like the others have, but has delivered already on promises," Pharr said. ' "The CGA is encouraging its members to consider strongly that four of the candidates for SBP were not present at the forum and that Stuart Tonkinson, Daily Tar Heel editor candidate, was not present," Pharr said. Candidates Brad Ives, Max Lloyd, Reggie Holley and Dirk Marshall were not present. The CGA endorsed Rickert and Schmidt as co editors of the DTH, Pharr said, "because we believe that Schmidt has a great deal of experience, and that the experience Arne can bring from the Phoenix is invaluable. "Also, the idea of having two editors is quite sound and will hopefully lead to more coverage of the CGA," Pharr said. The Phoenix endorsed Pavao for CAA president because he seemed to have a solid grasp of the issues, Simmons said. The Phoenix1 did not endorse any candidate for Residence Hall Association President, Simmons said, "because we weren't able to become well-enough informed about the race due to time restrictions." Davidson's condition improving White Animals rock with tunes from Monkees to Marley Junior varsity cheerleader Robin Davidson, who received a fractured skull in a fall during a stunt Jan. 15, has shown noticeable improvement in the past few days and has moved from critical to serious condition, a friend said Tuesday. Tanya Beeren, a sophomore from Charlotte and a close friend of Davidson's, said the cheerleader, although still not fully conscious, was responding now to pain and was moving her face, hands, and feet. "She seems to be hearing us talk ing," Beeren said. "We've been asking her to squeeze our hands, and she does. "They've piped music into her room, and her blood pressure actually responds to certain songs she likes," Wreck injures two students A UNC student is hospitalized at Student Health Services with a broken leg following a motor scooter accident last weekend. Kelly Powell, a sophomore from Wilmington, was leaving the parking lot of Piggly Wiggly grocery store in Carrboro when the Honda . scooter she and companion Bryan Murray, jvere riding was struck by a car entering the parking lot. Murray, a junior from Kill Devil Hills, received only a chipped bone in his knee and a few minor abrasions, but Powell received a compound fracture in her lower leg. Doctors inserted pins in her leg and put it in traction. Register today for Union classes Today is the last day for students to register for the Union's weekly features classes. The classes, including yoga, aerobics, dancercize, weaving, clogging, psychic spiritual development, tai-chi and knitting, begin Feb. 4. Those interested can sign up now in Union room 213 from 2-4 p.m. More information on the classes is available at the Union information desk. Diane Kurys Film Festival Three Thursdays of the finest in French cinema, from a hot young director. In French, with subtitles. Jan. 31 Peppermint Soda: Kurys' first, and the best French film of 1978. Feb. 7 Cocktail Molotov: Flaming youth in late-'60s Europe. Feb. 14 Entre Nous: Her best yet. starring Isabelle Huppert and Miou Miou. Shos at 7 & 9 p.m.; S2.50 Friends. S3.50 public. Carr Mill. Carrboro 929-2041 3 t P4 Li OL ! ; . fU1 REAL PIT BAR C Q 15-501 Bypass at Elliott Ud. in Chapel Hill 933-9248 FREE DELIVERY Beeren said. "WeVe even turned the (Carolina basketball), games, on in her room," Bereen said. "The doctor says he. thinks she's finally going to start getting better," Beeren said. She said Davidson, a sophomore from Rocky Mount, had been taken off several drugs that regulated her cranial pressure and blood pressure and kept her from moving around while still uncons cious. She also is being gradually taken off the respirator to which she has been connected because she has begun to draw breath on her own, Bereen said. "Her parents are so excited," Beeren said. "It's a whole different atmos phere in that waiting room now." RACHEL STIFFLER By IVY HILLIARD Staff Writer The White Animals get back to the basics of rock, but their sound also has a fresh, ail-American appeal to audien ces bored with often vapid top-40 fare. Whether performing a rowdy version of the Monkees' hit "I'm Not Your Steppin' Stone," their own polished ode "Constant Attention," or the cool reggae of Bob Marley 's "Could You Be Loved," The White Animals crank out some of the most danceable songs since Elvis wailed in Memphis. The group will perform at UNC tonight, sponsored by the Carolina Union social committee. In 1979, Kevin Gray, the band's front man, traded a doctorate in psychology and a residency at Nashville's Vander bilt Hospital for a rhythm guitar and the less wholesome American dream of fame and fortune. He soon met bass r i B BREAK V YOUR SPRING HEADQUARTER: xa.-. v (For Shaping Up!) Are you carrying a few extra pounds in the wrong places? You can't hide them on the beach...not i even in your ski outfit! Shape up now and have a great break! Well help you at TOE GYM 503C W. Main St, Carrboro I Clip The Coupon for One Week Free I (Valid for first time customers with appointment only) in uaytona oeacn Don't miss Spring Break at America's hottest beach. You'll bake in the sunshine and sizzle in the moonlight. There will be concerts, games, parties, exhibi tions, loads of freebies, golf, ten nis, Jai Alai, sailing, surfing, fish- ng, motor racing and great night life. Hop on a tour bus, catch a flight or set out by car. Just call a travel agent for free reservation service. Then pack a bag and head for the beach. V i "I'l Mil k 7" 1 i iz yz" A;: pj.-. d . - i Send my free official Spring Break Poster. I Name City Address . State Zip M32 I J Daytona Beach Resort Area, P.O. Box 2775. Daytona Beach. FL32015 I player Steve Boyd, and the rest, as they say, is history. Boyd and Gray share lead vocal duties, but each band member contrib utes to the group's chemistry. Lead guitarist Rich Parks' perpetual grin and clean-cut good looks have made him somewhat the heartthrob for younger fans. Drummer Ray Crabtree's percussion work is integrated into the band's overall sound. The fifth White Animal, Tim "Dreadmaster" Coats, is a laid-back master of ceremonies who engineers keyboards and synthesized percussion from his sound board. Gray has described The White Anim als' earliest days as the "1-know-four-chords-and-that's-more-than-you-know" style, but since the Animals' 'debut LP, Nashville Babylon, the group's sound has tightened and evolved stylistically. The group's most recent LP, Ecstasy, contains all original material except for a nine-minute cover of Jim Morrison's "Gloria." The original material ranges from the band's anthem, "Ecstasy" by Gray, to Boyd's teen valentine "This Girl is Mine" and an African kalimba tune. A new album has been in the works and should be in record stores soon. . Along with big concert dates, such as opening for Duran Duran, and videos, The White Animals still play their share of deb dances and one nighters, like many acts before them (The Police, R.E.M., etc.), until they happen to play the right place at the right time. The White Animals know they could be loved too, so they wait patiently, taking one steppin' stone at a time, until they get the constant attention they deserve. Meanwhile, the ranks of their fans swell. 777 White Animals will perform at 9:30 tonight in Great Hall in the Student Union. Call 962-2285 for ticket information. MAIM FOREVER 106 Henderson St. 967-2887 2nd Floor Above Hector's 967-2888 2 fori SPECIAL For the New Year we offer you a 2 for 1 special. Bring a friend with you to Hair Forever and the second cut is free. You and a friend can split the Regular Price of one haircut. Or, come in by yourself and get $3.00 off the price of a haircut. Offer with Selected Stylist Offer expires February 16, 1985 Please bring coupon Avoid the lottery blues. Apply nowl All apartments on the bus line to UNC. Fantastic Social Program. Call today for full information. 967-223 1 or 967-2234. In North Carolina call toll-free 1 -800-672- J 678. Nationwide, call toll-free 1-800-334-1656. The Apartment People 1 SIGN UPNOWf Sign-ups for Mens, Womens, Co-Rec, v Volleyball will take place: fO , 'oCS Date: Deadline February 1, 1985 , I )V Place: 304 Woollen Gym (Cf ) Time: any time during the day (cT Ford is proud to sponsor the Ford Bronco II Volleyball Classic. Avery spe cial intramural volleyball tournament for your college intramural program. JOIN THE FUN Read the information above and sign Official Vehicle of the U.S. Volleyball Association up with your IntramuralRecreational Sport Department today! EVERYONE CAN PLAY All students, staff and faculty are eli gible to compete. Winners receive awards courtesy of Ford Motor Company. FORD BRONCO II and the 1984 U.S. Volleyball Team . . . A Golden Performance! Ford congratulates the U.S. Men's Volleyball Team on winning the Olympic Gold Medal. As their proud sponsor, Ford Division salutes the U.S. Men's Volleyball Team for its gold-medal per formance in the XXIII Olympics at Los Angeles. To go all the way to the XXIII Olympiad, you need raw talent, tireless dedication, and years of hard work. The U.S. Volleyball Team displayed them all, and we applaud their achievement. Mat ' Vow

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