TTT) a a 0)Uilll JlllCLPlullL- Charity event includes singers, beauty pageant By DEMISE MOULTRIE Staff Writer Pi Kappa Phi fraternity will hold its ninth annual Burnout Friday, featuring live entertainment from The Targets and Marshall Crenshaw, and a Miss Hawaiian Tropic Beauty Pageant. Proceeds will go to the N.C. Burn Center. The Burnout will be held at the Pi Kappa Phi house on Finley Golf Course Road. The Targets, a band familiar to Chapel Hill, will start the Burnout at 2 p.m. The beauty pageant will be at 3:30 p.m., and Marshall Crenshaw, who songs include "Some Day, Some Way," will play at 4:30 p.m. The Burnout is a tradition started nine years ago, said Reggie Carpenter, Burnout co-chairman. After a Christmas ceremony, the fraternity house was left empty, and one of the brothers left a candle burning in his room. When the brothers returned, a fire had gutted the second and third floors in the back of the house," Carpenter said. The fraternity house was rebuilt. During the time it took to rebuild the house, other fraternities and sororities housed the brothers. "In gratitude for this, the brothers threw a big party GPSF opposes By GRANT PARSONS Staff Writer The Graduate and Professional Student Federation unanimously approved a resolution Tuesday stating its opposition to the $100 mandatory meal plan. The resolution was presented to the GPSF by Tom Terrell, former GPSF president and one of the authors of a Student Government report stating that student views were not fully considered in the implementation of the meal plan. GPSF President Brad Torgan invited Terrell to present the resolution at the meeting. "It boils down to simple issues," Terrell said. "No graduate students took part in any discussions about the meal plan, and there was no study that says that (the campus food service) needs a financial base (money to ensure quality food)." Under the meal plan scheduled for implementation in the fall, graduate students living in Craige dormitory must pay a minimum of $100 to campus food service money that would go much farther if students were allowed to make their own lunches without r . CampUS Calendar 7:30 p.m. UNCding Club meeting. VJoHnfKjHnU 8 p.m. "Interpretation as Devotion: . mUMUJUCiy Freud and Rabbinic Juda- 4 p.m. Public lecture, "Germany and lsm speaker, Susan Handel- the Origins of the First World man, University of Maryland, War," speaker Harmut Pogge Faculty Lounge, Dey Hall, von Strandmann, Oxford U ni- j n p.m. Anglican Student Fellowship, versity, 569 Hamilton Hall. Service of Holy Communion, . Hunger Responsibility Com- Chapel of the Cross. ' mittee meeting, Calmpus'Y. rr - 6:30 p.nwJatrPU-matcl. with State- I I.emS CUergS! LLl I i .'11 Cars,ioutside BoWraanGnqPA . .1 Artjfats1n Resid$nce'3nvitationaU" j s pool, continues until April 18, Central 7 p.m. UNC Outing Club meeting, Gallery, 1 18-A East Main St., Carrboro. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10 at EIXIOTS NEST Your Area Band Connection SPOT EOSIIORJ Happy Hour ijiofi til Band oPfill QR7-4.273 Knr Information n wu are m m ihatCK University Square 929-7143 0 IlllJllllKc in the spring when they moved back in the house," Carpenter said, "and it eventually became an annual event." . The annual celebration became a fund-raising activity. "It has grown in the last three, years, and more emphasis has been put on raising money for the Burn Center," Carpenter said. "We think it is an appropriate charity to get the money, and we are lucky that no one was injured by the fire." Carpenter said that in the past, the fraternity has been able to donate $1,000 to $2,000 to the Burn Center. This year's goal is to donate $4,000 to $5,000 to help the center in buying a hydrotherapy machine. "We're hoping that people will buy the tee shirts (available at Johnny T-Shirt) for the Burnout so we can increase our donation," he said. One of the major sponsors for the Burnout is 94-Z, a local radio station. "That is one of the sponsors really making it (the Burnout) possible for us this year," Carpenter said. "They have been really helpful." Transportation will be provided to the Burnout on Friday. Buses will leave the Student Union and Frat Court from 1 :30 to 3:45 p.m. and from 5:30 to 7 p.m. "I encourage students to use the buses to avoid DWIs," Carpenter said. $100 mandatory meal plan patronizing the food service, he said. "If I want to eat a peanut butter and jelly sandwich for lunch, it only costs 25 cents," Terrell said. "That's better than going to Lenoir hall and spending $2.50 for a plate of spaghetti or $1.40 for a piece of chicken." 1 Among the reasons stated in the GPSF resolution for the graduate students' opposition to the mandatory meal plan are the following: Numerous graduate and profes sional students who live in Craige dormitory, but do not come into main campus, must support the food service even before Chase cafeteria opens. Medical students living in Craige must pay the mandatory fee, even though they use a different (non-ARA) cafeteria. Numerous non-medical students in health fields who live in Craige can eat more easily at the Medical School. Graduate and professional students who do not use University eating facilities already are made to pay $10 per semester for Lenoir hall renovations. Faculty and staff who have the financial resources and who do use from 8 pm Begins n n u 11 u Granville Lenoir regularly do not pay a fee for renovations. Graduate and professional students desire optional choice in food selections in order to maximize convenience and limited financial resources. Graduate and professional students were not adequately represented on the Food Service Advisory Committee. Graduate and professional students do not feel bound to an agreement in which neither they nor the GPSF were consulted. The resolution also states "that the Graduate and Professional Student Federation opposes the mandatory meal plan and calls upon University leaders to reassess its need and its fairness with respect to graduate and professional students." The resolution passed by a voice vote withnodissention. f7 ew Self Service Copiers .03$ copy Excellent Quality Student Special Super roller file cabinets two drawer letter with lock 50 off List $87.00 Sale $42.95 Rams Plaza Chapel Hill 27514 967-2585 Bus run-directly in front of store! rst of Sh ill has. J--infer Towers tadem!: SmpFemrne Connrti cleairs way mm M oreime By TOM CONLON Staff Writer The Student Supreme Court with drew its March 12 injunction prohib iting a re-election for governor of Morehead Confederation Residence College Wednesday afternoon, clearing the way for a re-election on or after April 10. The order was issued as a settlement between plaintiff Leslie Nesbit and defendant David Venable. After the initial election Feb. 5, in which the Morehead Elections Committee declared Venable the winner, Nesbit charged Venable with campaign staff violations and failure to submit his financial statement by 5 p.m. on election day. Nesbit further stated Venable should be disqualified and that she be declared the winner. Wednesday, April 10 Catch The Half-Hour Comedy Show . . . This week only on Student Tel evision!!! Possibly the funniest 30 minutes you'll ever spend. Tonight, 10:30 p.m., on Village Cable Channel 11. Watch STV in your apartment. Or watch STV in Granville's Lounges. (Thanks, Granville, for the STV golf cart!) Or if you're really cool, watch at Mr. Gatti's . . . Just watch some where, it's time you knew what you were missing! American Hsart Association WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE Sunday, April 14 3:30 pm Memorial Hall featuring: The Durham Civic Choral Society Larry Cook, director General Admission $8.00 Special Student Price $4.00 n : Carolina Copy Csrster And Office Supply Inc. pst a Applications for summer housing now available. The Daily ad! g vemoF The settlement stated that Nesbit agreed to withdraw her complaint providing Venable issue a private statement of apology to her by himself, Gina Jacobs or Tony Kearney which might have occurred in the election for governor of Morehead Confederation Residence College. Nesbit charged that Kearney, as governor of Morehead Confederation, appointed himself to the Morehead Confederation Elections Committee and violated his obligation of neutrality by openly campaigning for Venable. She stated further that Area Director Gina Jacobs openly supported Vena ble's candidacy and pressured the elections committee to validate the election. Nesbit also claimed ballot boxes had been tampered with and that she was not allowed to examine the ballots. She added that Venable campaign workers were soliciting votes within 25 feet of polling sites, and that all actions were done with Venable 's knowledge. Venable denied such charges but agreed to the settlement. The settlement statement further stated that "in the re election for governor both candidates shall at all times before and during the re-election act in good faith and shall adhere to general standards of fair and proper conduct." It also cited that Kearney and Jacobs could in no way participate in the re-election. "As far as the settlement goes, I have no problems with the agreement," Venable said Thursday morning. "As far is the apology is concerned, it reads '1 understand that Leslie Nesbit feels that certain individuals acted improp erly during the past election, and I apologize for such conduct if any,' " he said. 5? Avoid the lottery blues. Apply nowf All apartments on the bus line to UNC. Fantastic Social Program. Call .today for full information. 967-2231 or 967-2234. In North Carolina call toll-free 1-800-672-1678. Nationwide, call toll-free I -800-334-1 656 UU MAUI anxiSonh 07 Surfing tjferfcl MAGAZINE .gummy v", I V LEO mom mrrwOTow mtcuCA. J , f B If See us for the latest in Swimwear and Sportswear Parkway Plaza II (Behind South Square Mall) 4Vo-oUoU q vni i Snw it in Th Dallv Tar Heel Tar Heel Wednesday. April 10, 19853 F-eicniCDini "I told Leslie I didn't feel any misconduct occurred, and the main reason I signed it was that 1 felt we needed to get on with the governor's election, as the residents of Morehead Residence College deserve that. 1 signed it more as a compromise." Nesbit declined comment on the proceedings, but said she was satisfied with the settlement. "There will be an election, and may the best person win," she said. Following the Feb. 5 election, Nesbit appealed the decision to the Residence Hall Association tribunal, where she argued that certain conduct on the part of David Venable and others should have resulted in his disqualification. The tribunal decided Venable should not be disqualified but that a new election be held where both Venable and Nesbit could enter as candidates. Nesbit appealed the tribunal's deci sion to the Student Supreme Court, and on Mar. 12 the court issued an injunc tion directing RHA to postpone any elections until the court had resolved the case. Student Supreme Court Justice Scott Norberg, in a prepared statement, said Nesbit and Venable settled their dispute out of court Tuesday afternoon and that the RHA should conduct a re-election where both candidates could run. o)0D'"DGa)(p UU UOu UxlsUkzj i 0 g nvnmw. u' in y .JC U f i f) 1) mm MM for 10 Off First Swimsuit j