The Daily Tar HeelMonday, February 20; 19897
friiTidltLrrri
It
Scott McDonald
Scott McDonald, the other candi- the DTH interview session,
date for District 12, did not attend
District 13 (2 seats)
Dave Davidson
Bill Stallings
Dave David
son is a freshman
M x 1 Sin 1 aASA
and English
major from
Longmeadow,
Mass.
A South Cam
pus escort system
and a computer
facility based on
South Campus are programs David
son would like to promote.
Edward Fischer
He also wants to print a district
newsletter regularly. I want students
to know what's going on," he said.
Davidson said he wants to install
a forum to give students in his district
an opportunity to bring up ideas they
would like congress to address.
Davidson has worked on the
academic affairs and special interests
committees of the executive branch.
He is also on the membership com
mittee of the Campus Y.
Bill Stallings is
a sophomore pol
itical science
major from Fair
field, Conn.
Stallings said
he would work to
improve bus ser
vice to his district
on the T line.
There is no late-
r
f
.v.v.v.v
night service, and that should be
established, he said.
"1 think I have the ability to change
the policy and work to get it done,"
he said.
Stallings ppposes the proposed $2
North Campus night parking fee.
Stallings served as an honor court
justice.
Kimberly Hight
Kimberly
Hight is a fresh
man pre-law stu
dent from
Monroe.
Hight said
there is not a lot
of involvement
from her off
campus district
and she would
like to change that. She wants to get
students interested in the decisions
that Student Congress is making.
"I'm very interested in being
involved," she said. "I'd like to be a
voice."
Hight worked in student govern
ment in high school.
.fed
District 16 (2 seats)
Gene Davis
r
Edward
Fischer is a
i sophomore app
lied mathematics
major from
Washington.
On-campus
parking is the
'main issue affect
ing students,
Fischer said. The
student body must resist having
luiiu&i uaiKiiiK ivis lUNtii iium iiiv-iii
t and resist plans for a $2 parking fee
in specified lots in the evening, he
9
John Lomax
JohnLomax, a
i i
sopnomore ousi-
ness administra-
tion major from v
Hickory, is run-
ning for re- jL "S 6 v .
election.
Lomax said
wants to restruc
ture budgeting
for The Daily Tar
Heel, he said. The DTH is constitu
tionally funded, and now receives 16
' percent of student fees. The money
t allocated for the DTH should be
distributed among all campus pub-
ian scniner
r
t
Ian Schiller is a
junior music edu
cation major
from Pough
keepsie, N.Y.
He said sepa
ration between
North Campus
'and South Cam
fpus should be
'eliminated.
A third-year resident of
Campus, Schiller acted as
Campus liaison to Student Congress
Jill Nystrom
Jill Nystrom, the other candidate
for District 13, did not attend the
South
South
said.
The construction of a cultural
center only for blacks will counteract
the purpose of such a center, Fischer
said. The center should be multicul
tural and function on a petition
system requiring groups wanting to
use the center to get a required
number of petitions to be recognized,
he said. Smaller cultural groups could
form together to fulfill the
requirement.
Fischer is also in favor of funding
for the Carolina Gay and Lesbian
Association.
lications, not the DTH exclusively,
Lomax said. This measure would
spread out the newspaper's budget,
reduce the budget required for other
publications and make more money
available to other campus organiza
tions, he said.
Lomax said he plans to create a
South Campus escort program and
a computer lab for South Campus
residence halls. Consolidating cam
pus food services under one company
and eliminating the mandatory $100
meal plan are Lomax's goals to reach
students on the entire campus, he
said.
this year. Schiller and Residence Hall
Association presidential candidate
David Smith thought of the idea of
a liaison to congress to be a watchdog,
Schiller said.
He said he supports a $13 student
fee hike to fund a student recreation
complex that would house the Well
ness Center, weight rooms and
aerobics rooms.
"I'm open-minded on most pro
grams," Schiller said. "I will evaluate
each program on an individual basis."
Gene Davis, a
junior speech
communications 's -
major from I s i!
Raleigh, is run- '
ning for re- , ;
election. j v
Students' - I
should make . j t
themselves heard i
as a voice in the "T -University
community, he said.
"Students should have input in
decisions that affect their lives, and
Gerry Hayes
Gerry Hayes, the other candidate
for District 16, did not attend the
District 17 (2 seats)
we as students must not stop badger
ing the administration until they
realize that we, too, are members of
this community."
Minority concerns such as recruit
ment, enrollment and retention
deserve special attention from Stu
dent Congress, Davis said.
Davis has served as chairman of
the congress rules and judiciary
committee, as a member of the ethics
committee and as a member of the
committee on student conduct.
Chris Peeler
Chris Peeler, the other candidate DTH interview session,
from District 17, did not attend the
District 1 8 (2 seats)
Thornton Long
DTH interview session.
Bret Batchelder
f
Bret Bat
chelder is a
sophomore busi
ness major from
Raleigh.
Batchelder
said his district
needs better
representation in
congress. "There
wasn't a feeling
that our opinions were being repres
ented fully," he said. "I would like
Jill Gilbert
to break that barrier a little bit more."
He said he would like to work with
the other congress representative in
the district to "get a general feeling
of what the people in our district
thinks
"IVe got a good feel for what it's
like to live off campus and the
problems it can pose," he said.
Batchelder is a co-chairman of the
Campus Y Habitat for Humanity
program and treasurer of Phi Gamma
Delta fraternity.
lift VJ 11LVI V, C
junior biology
major from New
Orleans, is run
ning for re
election. Campus park
ing is an impor
tant issue to her
off-campus dis- t
The proposed $25 parking mainte
nance fee should be used to expand
public transportation, she said.
She said she opposes the $2 night
A
DTH interview session.
District 14 (2 seats)
Samuel Bagenstos
y
Sam Bagen
stos is a sopho
more political
science major
from Durham.
Bagenstos said
his two years as
a South Campus
"resident and
experience as a
Morrison floor
: ..president have given him extra insight
, . into the needs of that part of campus.
oJ "The concerns of South Campus
are really ignored by Student Con
gress," he said. "What I want to do
is get specific proposals done that are
going to have specific benefits for
South Campus."
Staff parking lots on South Cam
pus often have empty spaces that
could be given to students, Bagenstos
said. "It's a real waste that there are
spaces that sit open all day," he said.
Extra lighting on walkways and
more police patrols on South Cam
pus would make the campus safer,
Bagenstos said.
Phillip Thompson
Phillip
'J'Thompson is a
j'junior geography
-major from
Providence.
'; ' Thompson
said his three
''years living in
Morrison Resi
dence Hall will
help put him in
touch with students so he can fairly
4'
1
- '2a
AW - A J
represent them. He also wants to
work closely with those in residence
hall government.
Parking and food services are
issues especially important to his
district, Thompson said. He said he
would like to see Chase Dining Hall
opened on Friday evenings.
"I want to go out to get input and
not make the students have to come
to me," Thompson said.
District 15 (2 seats)
Peter Hans
Peter Hans is a
sophomore polit
ical science major
, f r o m
, Hendersonville.
Hans said he is
concerned with
the problems of
.parking for his
.district and that
students who live
si"-
'1
f
there are too often ignored.
Student Congress should move in
a less radical direction, Hans said.
"The district is huge," he said. "I
have friends at each apartment
complex that can keep me in touch,
and I will let everyone know that they
do have a representative."
All-Campus sites:
Campus Y 10 a.m -7 p.m.
Craige 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Davis 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Student Union 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Health Sciences Library 10-7 p.m.
Morehead Sundial 1 0-5:30 p.m.
District sites:
Carmichael,(12) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Cobb (11) 10 a.m. -7 p.m.
Connor (11) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Ehringhaus (13) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Granville Towers (8) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Hinton James (13) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Law School (1)10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Lewis (10) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Manly (10) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Mclver (9) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Morrison (14) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Spencer (9) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Whitehead (12) 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
'Students must show I.D. and current registration card to
vote.
Only rising fifth-year seniors with proof of their status and
juniors may vote for senior class officers. For a write-in
vote to be valid, first and last name and office of the
candidate must be listed.
r
V;-:
Thornton
Long is a senior
RTVMP major
from Statesville.
Long said he is
concerned for
students and is
aware of the
issues affecting
the student body.
"The role of
the administration is to give the
Carole Yost
student body what they need, and I
will work toward those needs," he
said.
Long said he is opposed to parking
fees and efforts to take away more
student parking spaces. He said he
favors funding the Black Cultural
Center and the Carolina Gay and
Lesbian Association.
Long said he also favors looking
into construction of a multicultural
center.
Carole Yost is
a junior political 'J
science and crim- (
inal justice major I
from China
Grove.
Yost said she
wants to encour
age more campus
involvement
from students
who live off campus.
"Student affairs are just as impor
tant to off-campus students as they
are to those on campus," Yost said.
She said her plans include increas
ing student participation in all
elections on campus and working
with University officials and admin
istrators to fulfill students ideas.
VOTE . TUESDAY)
parking fee proposed by the chancel
lor's ad hoc parking committee.
Gilbert said she would support
more funding to patrol groups like
SAFE Escort service and Student
Patrol that contribute to making the
campus safer.
Her experience living on and off
campus makes her a good candidate,
Gilbert said. "1 recognize how things
work, what needs to be worked on
and how to get things done," she said.
Gilbert is a member of the Student
Congress Student Affairs Committee.
DBS IT 0t
(graduate districts)
District 1 Law School
District 2 School of Education, Social Work, Computer
Science
District 3 Anthropology, Business Administration, City &
Regional Planning, Economics, Geography, History,
Operations Research, Physical Education, Political Science,
Public Administration, Psychology, Recreation Administration,
RTVMP, School of Journalism, Sociology, Speech
District 4 Anatomy, Biochemistry & Nutrition, Biomedical
Engineering, DATE, Dentistry, Genetics, Microbiology
Immunology, Neurobiology, Occupational Therapy,
Pathology, Pharmacology, Physical Therapy, Physiology,
Rehabilitation Counseling, Speech & Hearing, Radiological
Science, Toxicology
District 5 Medical School, School of Nursing
District 6 Public Health: Biostatistics, Environmental
Sciences & Engineering, Epidemiology, Health Education,
Health Policy & Administration, Maternal & Child Health,
Nutrition, Parasitology & Lab Pract., P.H. Nursing, LawPublic
Health
District 7 Art (History and Studio), Biology, Botany,
Chemistry, Classics, Comparative Literature, Dramatic Art,
Ecology, English, Folklore, Geology, German, Library
Science, Linguistics, Marine Science, Math, Music,
Pharmacy, Philosophy, Physics, Religious Studies, Romance
Languages, Slavic Languages, Statistics, Zoology
(undergraduate districts)
District 8 Granville Towers
District 9 STOW Residence College (Spencer, Alderman,
Kenan, Mclver, Old East, Old West)
District 10 Olde Campus Residence College (Aycock,
Everett, Grimes, Lewis, Mangum, Manly)
District 11 Henderson Residence College and Morehead
Confederation (Alexander, Connor, Winston, Cobb, Joyner,
Graham, Stacy)
District 1 2 Scott Residence College (Avery, Carmichael,
Parker, Teague, Whitehead)
District 13 Ehringhaus, Hinton James
District 14 Morrison, Craige
District 15 All off-campus undergraduates in the area
beginning at the Franklin-Columbia intersection & extending
north on Airport Rd. & east on Franklin St., extending into 15
501. (Northeast)
District 16 All off-campus undergraduates in the area
beginning at the Franklin-Columbia intersection & extending
south on Columbia into Pittsboro Rd. & east on Franklin St.,
extending into 15-501. (Southeast)
District 17 All off-campus undergraduates in the area
beginning at the Franklin-Columbia intersection & extending
south on Columbia into Pittsboro Rd. & west on Franklin St.,
extending into NC 54. (Southwest)
District 18 AH off-campus undergraduates in the area
beginning at the Franklin-Columbia intersection & extending
north into Airport Rd. & west on Franklin St., extending into
NC 54. (Northwest)