The Daily Tar HeelMonday, February 12, 19903 Caimpos and City ACC numbers correction In the Feb. 9 news brief "ACC winning numbers drawn,"The Daily Tar Heel incorrectly reported the alternate lists for ACC tournament tickets. The alternates were lists 5 and 37. The Daily Tar 1 leel regrets the error. BOT approves firm The Board of Trustees Thursday approved the architectural firm Dodge and Associates of Raleigh for the renovation of Old East and Old West Residence Halls. The renovation is slated to be completed by the summer of 1 993 in time for the 200th anniversary of the laying of the cornerstone of Old East on Oct. 12, 1993. The projected cost of the renova tions is $4,097,000. Southern Collection speaker David Moltke-Hansen, director of the Southern Historical Collec tion, will speak about the University's collection of manu scripts, letters, papers and other materials about the South Feb. 14. The lecture, which is free and open to the public, will be held at 5:30 p.m. in the Assembly Room of Wilson Library. Former director of the S.C. His torical Society, Moltke-Hansen will address "Southern Historical Col lecting: The Future of the South's Past."" SPTES creates Referral Service The Student Pan-Time Employ ment Service (SPTES), with the child care coordinator's office, is creating a Childsitting Referral Service which will employ students to care for children of UNC's faculty, staff and students on a call basis. The service will provide a direc tory with the students' names, job references and availability sched ules for taking care of children for parents use. The initial directory will include listings for 1990 spring and summer semesters. It will be on reserve at several on-campus locations and will also be made available to parents. SPTES will have a recruiting table in the Pit Feb. 15, 16 and 19 betw een 1 0 a.m. and 2 p.m. Students can also visit the SPTES office in Room 2 1 7A, Suite C of the Student Union. Outdoor drama auditions Thirteen outdoor historical drama companies will be auditioning per formers and technicians for summer jobs March 24 at UNC. The auditions, sponsored by the UNC Institute of Outdoor Drama, are open to anyone 1 8 years or older with theater training or experience. Applications must be received by March 19. To request application materials, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Auditions Coordinator, Institute of Outdoor Drama, CB 3240, NCNB Plaza, UNC, Chapel Hill. N.C. 27599-3240. Faculty members honored Six faculty members who received 1989 teaching awards were recog nized at halftime during the UNC N.C. State University basketball game Wednesday. Junius Terrell, professor of ac counting, was recognized for receiv ing the Nicholas Salgo Distinguished Teacher Award for "teaching excel lence as evidenced by classroom effectiveness and ability to motivate and inspire students." Others cited were Eleanor Brown ing, associate professor of nursing; James Jorgenson, professor of chem istry; Peter Kaufman, associate pro fessor of religious studies; Joseph Lowman. associate professor of psychology; and Julia Wood, asso ciate professor of speech communi- cation. They received Tanner Awards for excellence in under graduate teaching. Space available in seminar Space is still open in a weekend seminar on political changes in China, offered as part of UNC's Adventures in Ideas spring program. 'The Struggle for Democracy and Capitalism in China," March 2-3, examines the Communist country's turbulent past and questionable fu ture. Participants will examine the Tiananmen Square massacre with Craig Calhoun, associate professor of sociology, who was in Beijing during the spring 1989 uprising. The program will begin the after noon of March 2 and will end by noon March 3. For information on cost and registration, call the Hu manities Program office, 962-1 106 fry demit By STEPHEN POOLE Staff Wiiter The University soon may have to find avenues in addition to the Student Stores as significant sources for stu dent aid revenue, according to Students for Educational Access (SEA), an or ganization which promotes the removal of barriers to higher education. In a report released Thursday, the SEA urged the Board of Trustees to consider the reestablishment of now defunct scholarships, cease reductions in scholarship money and find alterna tive sources of student aid money. "Many things seem to be having a Nicholson, Cole to run for senior class office . : - r if - v.; u BrianNicholson v v Committee formed to fill education post By JENNIFER DUNLAP Staff Writer Leadership abilities will be an im portant factor in the choice of a new dean of the School of Education, search committee members and Chancellor Paul Hardin said Friday. The recently-formed committee, chosen by Hardin, is conducting a na tionwide search to replace Dean Frank Brown, who will resign June 30. Hardin will meet for the first time today with the committee, which in cludes faculty members, a state educa tion official, one graduate student and one UNC alumnus. Both Hardin and Edward Holley, dean emeritus of the library and infor mation science department and chair man of the committee, said the educa tion school needs a strong leader. "It's an important search for the University," Holley said. "My col leagues and I on the committee will do our best to see that the School of Edu cation has the leadership it needs at this period." Robert Phay, a committee member and Kenan professor of public law and government, agreed. "The School of Education needs strong leadership to make UNC-Chapel Hill the primary institution for the development of teach ers, administrators and support staff for North Carolina's schools." Hardin said the dean will play an important role in the state. "The School of Education has to be in the forefront of working with North Carolina's pub lic schools to ensure strengthening of education at all levels in the state." Spangler praises efforts to raise graduation rates By KARI BARLOW Assistant State and National Editor UNC-system President CD. Span gler told the Board of Governors (BOG) Friday that progress was being made in increasing the graduation rates of stu dent athletes at each of the 16 universi ties in the system. Each university is required to submit an annual report on its athletic pro grams, and most of the reports were received and released last week. In his speech to the BOG, Spangler emphasized efforts made by N.C. State interim Chancellor Larry Monteith to correct the problems in the university's athletic program. The NCSU report responded spe cifically to 14 recommendations put forth by Spangler in August 1989. One response includes the appoint ment of a Dean of Undergraduate Stud ies at NCSU. In his report to Spangler, Monteith said there was a need for a Dean of Undergraduate Studies, who would be responsible for the performance of freshmen and sophomores and for keeping these students in direct contact with an academic adviser. In a memo to the BOG Committee on Personnel and Tenure, Spangler recommended that the BOG authorize Monteith to establish this new faculty position as soon as possible. Spanglercited marked improvements in the athletic program at East Carolina University. Two years ago, the gradu ation rate for ECU football players was groy negative impact on the availability of funds for student aid. The report was intended to draw attention to that," said SEA co-coordinator Stuart Hathaway. The report contends that one threat to the availability of funds is the declin ing success of the Student Stores, which in recent years has annually contrib uted about $500,000 to student aid funds. According to the SEA, revenue from the Student Stores may diminish due to the closing of the Pit Stop, competition for textbook sales, last year's renova tion to the Daniels Building and Gen eral Assembly budget cuts. ill and Glenn Cole According to Hardin, the new dean would need to have a strong rapport with faculty and students, personal integrity and strong experience in teach ing or administration at a good school of education. The dean would have to be committed to the teaching aspect of the School of Education and the re search and public service aspects of the school, he said. Phay stressed the importance of maintaining a high level of research at the school in the areas of learning theo ries and school organization. Holley said this search will be typi cal of UNC's dean searches. Holley also headed the committee to search for a new dean of the College of Arts and Sciences in 1985. Holley said the committee will so licit nominations and take applications. The committee will also place adver tisements in several national journals to attract applicants to the position, he said. "We will cast our net broadly." The committee could receive up to 200 applicants and nominees for the position, he said. Holley said the committee will meet with people within the school to get their opinions on what the school needs in a new dean. All suggestions would be considered, he said. Aundrea Creech, a junior education and biology major from Selma, said the new dean would need teaching experi ence which could be passed along to students who are studying to be teach ers. "I think most importantly, the new dean needs to be someone who has been in a classroom." 5 percent. This year's report said that 62 percent of the 1983 freshman foot ball players and 50 percent of the 1984 freshman players had graduated. Spangler also called for an examina tion of the educational missions of each of the 16 universities. "North Carolina and our nation are swiftly changing, and it is clear that if we are going to continue to give to the state the leadership and service that we have always given in the past, we must begin now to prepare for change and to test the sufficiency of our policies for the new tasks that are before us," he said. The educational mission defines an institution as a research university or a comprehensive university and outlines the various degrees it offers. Spangler said the BOG must look at the assigned mission of each of the 16 institutions as the year 2000 approaches. In 1976, the BOG stated its intention to increase the college-going rate for blacks and other disadvantaged youths, Spangler said. The board has made substantial progress, but still has not reached the national norm, he said. Spangler said he would ask all chan cellors to prepare a report outlining future changes that are needed at their respective universities. In other business, the BOG adopted a resolution requiring university-related private foundations to be audited. But the audit would not require the identifi cation of any persons who have made donations to the organization. V- . ( A yggeu The Pit Stop, a snack bar, closed last year because of pressure from the University. "There was a feeling that it was harmful to Marriott, so we were in structed to close by the Office of Busi ness and Finance," said Rutledge Tufts, business manager of the Student Stores. As one of 1 1 food stores, the Pit Stop was one of the few successful units in the Student Store chain, Tufts said. "In order to provide services, we operate some at a loss," he said. "The Pit Stop did quite well." Of the four threats listed in the SEA report to Student Store business, the By SARAH CAGLE Assistant University Editor Brian Nicholson, a political science majorfrom Whiteville, and Glenn Cole, a political science and speech major from Charlotte, have announced their candidacy for senior class president and vice president. Nicholson and Cole said their cam paign, "Make the Best Last," is an attempt to give the class of 1991 the best senior year possible. "We're ask ing the class to help us do it," Nicholson said. They said if elected they would get input from all seniors for their projects. "We have an obligation to find out what it is people want rather than trying to sell them a bill of goods," Nicholson said. They said they would distribute fliers and a senior newsletter to inform sen iors of upcoming issues. They would r f) V ; , v-" I 1 0, . . .fW:;-':-' -..-"?'",,'V yV Foiled again Two contestants face off in the midst of a heated afternoon. UNC's men's and women's tdamswerfe men's foil match in Fetzer Gymnasium Saturday both victorious this weekend. : Town Meetings Monday, Feb. 12 Chapel Mill Town Council 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 306 N. Columbia St. Included on the agenda: A decision on the alternate resolutions for the Lambda Chi Alpha special use permit modification, consideration of a preliminary plan for the Pritchard Park library and a presentation of the Human Services Advisory Board's needs report. Tuesday, Feb. 13 Carrboro Board of Aldermen 7:30 p.m. Carrboro Town Hall, 301 W. Main St. Included on the agenda: The approval of site boundaries for post office site, adoption of the 1 990 planning retreat action and a work session to review watershed protection amendments. none reasons and loss of the Pit Stop was the greatest. Tufts said. Competition from Pop's Tar Heel Textbooks, 301 W. Franklin St., and other merchants for textbooks and other items was slightly overstated in the SEA report, he said. "Our impression is it will stabilize. They'll get some por tion of the market and we'll get a por tion," he said. "We're not in competition with Fran klin Street merchants, but if they didn't exist we would sell more," Tufts said. The SEA also cited last year's reno vation of the Daniels Building, which houses the Student Stores, as a burden A M P U also hold office hours in the Pit to gauge senior opinion on the senior class gift, the commencement speaker and the senior class logo. 'The senior class is a fairly small constituency, so the senior class offi cers need to make an effort to include as many people as possible," Nicholson said. Nicholson and Cole said they would send information early to seniors about services at University Career Planning and Placement Center. Seniors have received the information over the summer in past years, but they should receive it as juniors, they said. They said they would also sponsor a 7 ffN; IMS Wx ' - I I to sales. The building was under con struction for 12 months making entry into the store difficult for students, but sales should return to normal now that the renovations are over, he said. The recent General Assembly budget cuts are also expected to hurt business. Once University funds are cut, de partments would be unable to offer the Student Stores the usual business for supplies, he said. "A large part of our business comes from selling things to departments," Tufts said. "We can't really say what the impact is yet, but we suspect it's there," he said. three-on-three basketball tournament and a pool tournament to raise money for the senior class to donate to local charities. They would continue to hold the traditional senior nights out dining the year, but they would like to change senior week to include a night out at a different bar every night. They said they are also woikiug with the N.C. Department of Motor Vehicles to get state-issued license plates for alumni. The design would feaiuie the Old Well, Nicholson said. Nicholson is a resident assistant at Granville Towers West and has founded achapter of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity at the University. He has also seiwd as president of Old East Residence Hall. Cole is president and former vice president of Sigma Phi Epsilon frater nity. T i Nam' i ( i "4 DTrt'Schuyler Brc-va Attention candidates; The Daily Tar Heel will inter view Student Congress candidar.es on a walk-in basis Feb. 12 from? 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. and on Feb. 13 from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. in Room 224 of the Student Union. ; Candidates should be prepared to have their photographs taken; at the time of their interviews. : Any candidates for congress who cannot attend either interview ses sion should contact Sarah Cagle-at 962-0245 as soon as possible.