The Daily Tar Heel Thursday, March 19, 19873 New ST V plans easier access By MARK FOLK Staff Writer The STV Board ot Directors recently elected Don Harris as STV's station manager for next year. Tm really excited about being elected and cant wait to begin my new job." Harris said. "Hopefully 1 can help STV continue to grow as it has in the past." Harris said that although lie plans to make changes to improve the station's accessibility, he wants to retain STV's basic organization. "The basic organization of STV is great, and I hope to keep it that way," Harris said. "1 just want to work to make STV more available to the students." One of Harris ideas is pushing for cable hook-ups in residence halls. He said this might allow STV to broad cast across campus. "1 plan to really push for the hook up of cable in dorms," Harris said. "This would reallv open the door for STV." Harris said he also plans to get more air time for shows, improve fund raising, produce more shows per week and consider obtaining academic credit for students who are active in STV. Acquiring more equipment for the station is another goal. Harris said. "We are hampered now since we onlv own two cameras." he said. UNC student arrested fight at Hector s By LEIGH ANN MCDONALD Staff Writer A UNC student was charged with assault Tuesday night after an incident at Hector's Restaurant on Franklin Street. Ulysses Nicholas Kiousis, a 20-year-old from Point Harbor, N.C., was arrested after striking Matthew Stuart in the eye with his fist, said Chapel Hill Police Planner Keith Lohmann. According to Chapel Hill police S4 bjcsmwg jone- Nationat Kidney Foundation o North Carolina r:'JlP0&oi-Z3B3. Chapel HillKl Ci 275i5.-9718l Spirited Clothes For Men And Women l,C s, S- All Men's Clothing NOW 50 OFF! Monday-Saturday 9:30-6:00 .Sunday 1:00-5:00 The hardest thing ing into professional music is well, break ; ing into professional music. So if you're kx)king for an oppor tunity to turn your musical talent into V a full-time perform jng career, take a kxxi kx)k at theMV i Army, ,. . It's not all parades and John Philip Sousa. Army bands'rock. waltz and b(xgie as well as march, and they perform before concert au- diencesas well as spectators. . Witn an average ij II i i F-tLH-Y TLX i v vt 5 (ill mamageir "This summer I plan to put STV on all of the area stations' donating list for equipment." The STV Board of Directors is a 17-member committee composed of faculty, staff, student leaders, and students who hold STV executive positions. Martin Clark, member of the committee and present STV station manager, said he feels the committee made the right decision. "I'm really pleased by the commit tee's decision," Clark said. "Don has a lot of maturity, and he has had a great deal of experience in working with television." Clark said he also hopes STV can become more accessible to students next year by establishing cable in residence halls. "Some day I'd like to see STV become as accessible to students as the Daily Tar Heel is now. where someone can just turn on a TV set and watch it," he said. And Clark agreed that developing a way to bring in more equipment and money to STV would be beneficial. "We haven't been able to find that one big fund raiser that raised a lot of money," Clark said. "I hope Don will somehow find a way to create money for STV." ; Harris said he plans to get as many people as possible involved in STV next year. His main goals are to educate the students working with reports, Stuart had a large knot and cut above his right eye. The police called the South Orange County Rescue Squad, but Stuart was not taken to the hospital. Stuart could not be reached for comment. Paul Wiester, an employee at Hector's, said he was a witness to the fight, but he did not know why it started. "The guys just started shouting at each other and calling each other names. One reached across the table and hit the other guy in the right eye," he said. Weister said he grabbed Kiousis after Kiousis swung a ketchup bottle at Stuart and missed, letting the bottle fall to the floor. "After the fight, Stuart walked outside and Kiousis sat down inside until the police came," Weister said. Kiousis said he had no comment. 929-7332 171 Franklin St. 929-7332 Kfv1 (g about break of 40 performances a month, there's also the opportunity for travel not only across America, but possibly abroad. Most important, you can : " expect a first-rate pro fessional environment from your instructors, facilities and fellow mi icicinnc Vv X nf ) SSo has educational programs ran hfln Davrororr- rlnrv insfriir-' ... ' : uon.iinun you qual ify, even elp repay At I if V. a, I ? Si J Don Harris STV about broadcasting and inform both students and faculty about what's going on around them. "1 want to make STV as fun, yet as educational as possible next year," Harris said. "Not only is STV a place for students to have a creative outlet, but it is also a way for students and faculty to keep up with what's happening." .Workshop to discuss traditions' of black self-help By KRISTEN GARDNER Staff Writer The eighth annual Black Expe rience Workshop, sponsored by the UNC School of Social Work, will be held in the Student Union March 19 and 20 to educate people about traditions of self-help within the black community. "The Black Experience: Building on Self-Help Traditions" is open to the public as well as to social workers, Audreye E. Johnson, asso ciate professor in the School of Social Work, said Wednesday. "The purpose of the workshop is to educate people in general regard ing the black experience," Johnson said. "There is a formal and informal system of self-help within the black community which currently operates to meet black needs." But the help system alone is not adequate, Johnson said. "The public sector has never done enough to meet the needs of the black community," she said. Cassandra Butts, chairwoman of Black Women United, said Wednes day that self-help has been histor ically significant in the black com munity. The workshop will explore the history of self-help traditions and suggest ways that blacks can learn from these traditions and re-apply them. Butts said. - John Hope- Franklin, a James B. SALES - SERVICE - REPAIRS 104 W. MAIN ST.. CARRB0R0 967-5104 (Across From Wendy's On C Busline) MON-SAT9-6 We've Expanded Our Store! Come See Our Large Selection Of Bicycles And Our Wide Variety Of Bike Accessories! We Cany The Best: Centurion Trek Cannondale Schwinn Mountain Bikes Earth Cruisers lO.OO'OFF"'; SPRING BIKE TUNE-UP Reg. $29.50 - MOW $19.50 True Wheels Adjust Brakes Adjust Gears, Bearings Oil & Lubricate Moving Parts fo) o that vrn i -c you your federally-insured student loans. ir? If you can sight- Algetoa coptest-on; campus attracts yoraig mattli whizzes By ERIC BRADLEY Staff Writer . ; " College students aren't the only ones who have to endure competitive exams - 1 20 central North Carolina students, most of them barely 13 years old, came to UNC Wednesday to compete for the right to be considered the state's most promis ing junior and senior high school algebra students. Each of the 38 participating schools could send its best four algebra students to the contest. Stephen London, a seventh grader from Grey Culbreth Junior High School in Chapel Hill, won first place. Along with the other 14 finalists, London will now go on to a semifinal state contest at Fayette ville State University. "Everyone expected me to be first place," London, 13, said, filled with excitement after winning his foot high trophy. "Everyone else is in eighth and ninth grade, and I'm the Duke professor emeritus at Duke University and author of ten books on black history, will be the keynote speaker for the event. Franklin will discuss "Values and Traditions in the Afro-American Community" during the event's opening session Friday at 9 a.m. in the Student Union Auditorium. Other speakers for the event include Agnes D. Lattimer, medical director of Cook County Hospital Campus Calendar Thursday 3:30 p.m. Career Planning and Placement Services will hold Job Hunt 101, an orientation workshop, in 210Hanes. 4 p.m. Christian Science Oraniza tion is meeting in the South Gallery at the Union. Women's Club Soccer practice will be held Mon days and Wednesdays on E-haus field. New players are welcome. Call Jennifer at 929-0706 for more information. The Society of Environ mentally Concerned Stu dents will meet to discuss ...... its recycling project. New members welcome. THE M ASMOKE. - Since 1971 read music, performing in the Army could be your big break. Write: Chief, Army Bands Office, Fort Benjamin Harrison, IN 46216-5005. Or call toll free 1-800-US A-ARMY. J.YOU ca4 5i 1 1 only one in seventh grade, so they expected me to win," he said. After the exam, London said he wasn't sure where he wanted to attend college, where he will prob ably have to sit through bigger and better exams. "Most likely 111 go here," he said. The annual contest was sponsored by UNC's Center for Mathematics and Science Education, the College of Arts and Sciences and the School of Education. "The contest encourages students to get involved in math," said Rebecca Sexton, director of the contest. "It keeps up an interest in math in high school students." Coming to UNC to participate in an algebra contest is good for high school students, she said. "1 think there's a real benefit," she said. "I think it's good for them to see the campus and see what a university is like. Most of them have never seen a campus before." in Chicago, 111.; Darlene Clark Hine, professor of history at Purdue University; Benjamin Ruffin, direc tor of public affairs for R.J. Reynolds-Nabisco; and Walter R. Allen, professor of sociology at the University of Michigan. ' The programs will begin at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, with a discussion by Lattimer of self-help traditions in the black community. Registration for the workshops 5:00 p.m. Action Against Apartheid is showing the film "South Africa Belongs to Us" in 209 Union. AIS will sponsor a perfor mance by the Carolina Indian Circle in the Union. 5:30 p.m. The Society of Environ mentally Concerned Stu dents will meet to discuss its stream watch and soil conservation programs. New members welcome. 7 p.m. UNC Outing Club will meet in the Union. Elec tions for next year will be held. Career Planning and Placement Services will sponsor a presentation by the Peace Corps in 209 Hanes. open to all UNC students. Campus Crusade for I. J S 11 U U m m m m w - """" 1 hjwa-- . When You Present This Ad Offer Good Thru March 26 AUDI0V1SI0MS Oak Creek Village (behind T.K. Tripps) Durham 493-8888 Chapel Hill 968-1 141 eat in Franklin Center Delicious and Delightful! Come in to see our 12' display case of cheesecakes, cakes, tortes, pies, strudel, cream horns and PattVs popular sour cream chocolate squares 36 Deli Sandwiches Croissant Sandwiches Potato Burger Muffeletta Reuben Turkey Reuben Itaiian Sub Hot Roast Beef Knockwurst Blintzes Knishes Largest Dessert 942-4S16 Eat in Carry out Catering . Opn 7 Days 11 am- 8 pm And being a contest winner, of course, is even better than being a contest participant, she said. "It shows them they are among the best math students in the state," she said. "It gives them a good head start." Second place in the contest went to Christine Moritz, 12, of Phillips Junior High in Chapel Hill. "I wasn't really expecting it," she said. But she was happy to win nonetheless, she said. Third-place winner Jeff Huang, 14, from Culbreth, was also happy with his success. "Oh. I'm thrilled," he said. Aside from individual winners, awards went to the top three schools. Tied for first place were Culbreth and Guy B. Phillips Junior High School, both of Chapel Hill; in second place was Western Middle School, of Elon College; and in third place was J.E. Holmes Junior High of Eden. - will begin at 8 a.m. Friday. Participants will choose two of the 12 workshops to be offered during the day. The closing session, "Reflec tions for the Future," will be held at 4:30 p.m. Registration fee for the workshop is $30. Interested people should contact Audreye Johnson at the UNC School of Social Work for registration forms and for more information. Christ will hold Thursday Night Live in 205-206 Union. Intervarsity Christian Fel lowship, North Chapter, will meet in the Union. Spring Break projects will be discussed, and "Cele brating Our Sexuality," part of the series "Growing Closer," will be presented. 7:30 p.m. Fine Arts Festival '87, "Southern Accents," will hold a preview by Richard Allen in the Carolina Inn Ballroom. North Carolina Center for Peace Education will show "Cambodia: This Shat tered Land" at the Wesley Foundation as part of its "Ecocide: A Strategy of War" series. Admission is $1 per film. CATERING Strombpli Italian Sausage Meatball Bounce Omelettes Bagel Melt Pizza Bagel German Band Deli Plate Kielbassa Bagel Eggel Latke LJ , n , TAKE OUT Tripodi's II Uptown Selection in the Triangle r Y V