Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 28, 1994, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 Wednesday, September 28,1994 Harris feeler means m mas i rnTWBI SMITHFIELD BACON ric^C'W^^lil CARWNGBOARD LUNCHIB9 MEATS 5502 1 S Til TOMATOES *.## jf LOW PRICES REG. OR THIN SKINNER SPAGHETTI 2/|OO 16 oz. jjj| WEEKLY SPECIAL HARRIS TEETER NONFAT YOGURT 4/fOO 8 OZ. ■ HARRIS 7IETER...THE BEST IS WHAT WE'RE All ABOUT REGULAR OR FAT FREE _ _ _ IN THE DELI-BAKERY NABISCO 199 MACARONI AA NEWTONS oi 6 I 1 [SALAD LB #yy HARRIS TEETER FROZEN — ■ CHUNk’IiKHT™ SE * >a ju. ORANGE AO TUNA IN 2/129 JUICE jr 11 WATER &? ■ REGULAR OR WITH BLEACH _ WHITE OR WHEAT SURF ULTRA 2/EOO HT LITE OA DETERGENT g z J BREAD juQT Prices Effective Through Oct. 4,1 994 Prices In This Ad Effective Wednesday, September 28, Through Tuesday, October 4, 1994 In Our Chapel Hill Stores Only. We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. None Sold To Dealers. We Gladly Accept Federal Food Stamps. GREAT VALUE PEPSI OR DIET PEPSI WEEKLY SPECIAL BUY ONE 5.5-6 OZ. BAG EAGLE THIN CHIPS AND GET ONE FREE Carolina NORML Plans Concert To Raise Funds, Attract Members BYLISA ROBBINS STAFF WRITER Carolina NORML, the UNC branch of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, will have a benefit concert Oct. 20 to obtain funds and mem bership, the group announced Monday night. The new organization, which has about 45 members, hopes to attract new mem bers and gain monetary support through the concert at The Islands on Franklin Street. The concert will include performances by Brother Junebug, Section 8, DSF, Voo doo Birds, and the Kleds, who have all said they would participate at no cost to NORML. Money raised from the concert —as well as funding from sponsorships will help the organization with operational ex penses. Elections also were held at the Monday meeting held in Murphey Hall. About 30 people attended the meeting. President Kevin Whiteacre, Vice Presi dent Bryan Rapp, Secretary Josh Tewell, and Treasurer Sonya Arsenen are NORML’s new officers. NORML members also discussed up coming activities such as Medical Mari juana Day, a day that is dedicated to dis cussing the legalization of marijuana for medicinal use, and campus speeches by well-known speakers who may visit the University. WEDNESDAY 1 p.m. “Black Pearls” orders for proofs are due in the Black Cultural Center. 3 p.m. School Of International Training will hold an information session in 12 Caldwell Hall. Come see how easy it is to study abroad. 6 p.m. Gender Tacks, a gender issues journal, will meet in the Union second-floor lounge. Inter ested writers and others are encouraged to attend. 7 p.m. The School For Field Studies will hold a presentation open to all interested students in 210 Hanes Hall. Sponsored by University Career Ser vices. 7:30 p.m. Kallisti! (The UNC student pagan organization) meets at Ben & Jetty’s, due to Fall Break, for a social meeting. SUNDAY 6:30 p.m. Attention Jewish Grads! Meet your peers for dinner at Maxx’s Cellar. Call 942-4057 for further information. MONDAY NOON The Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cnltnral Center Presents: “Around The Circle” -a talk show, from Noon until 2 p.m. every Monday. The topic for this meeting is “Black Prejudice: The Lighter the Better?” which will be hosted by Tyson King- Howto interview with the Fortune 500 without even setting out 5 of m OK, graduate-to-be. You can get up early or you can get Career/NET™ It’s simple: You give us your resume in a personal profile on the disk we provide. And we guarantee to deliver it to 10,000 employers (including the Fortune 500) in exactly the form they’re looking for. Your Career/NETjOIM enrollment kit—a preprogrammed disk and a booklet of step-by-step instructions —is $99.95* To be in the next nationwide distribution to yßy employers, order today. Call 1-800-682-8539. EBRHSBInht 'Plus $4.95 for shipping and handling. UNIVERSITY “We don’t try to pass off marijuana as harmless. But it should be your right to smoke it just like its your right to have a scotch and soda. ” KEVIN WHITEACRE Carolina NORML president Whiteacre, a senior from Dallas, Texas, mentioned some of the issues that NORML has faced throughout the past few weeks as the organization has received growing pub licity. He addressed an attack made against NORML by a student in a letter to the editor in the Sept. 22 issue ofThe Daily Tar Heel. “Articles like this (one) aren’t worth answering, ” Whiteacre said Monday. “The only fact he got right was that the hemp plant has a variety of economic uses. The rest is nothing but slander and name-call ing.’’ Whiteacre said NORML, which is try ing to establish itself as an official student organization, is in favor of regulating mari juana in the same manner alcohol is regu lated. “We don’t try to pass off marijuana as harmless," he said. “But it should be your right to smoke it just like it’s your right to have a scotch and soda.” Campus Calendar Meadows. Globe Committee of the Campus Y will meet in Union 226. The topic will be U.S. intervention in Haiti. TUESDAY 5 p.m. NCSTAR will hold a training session for anyone interested in facilitating discussions on diver sity with local middle school students in the Campus Y. Call Anna at 914-5480 for further information. Sponsored by Students For The Advancement of Race Relations. Apply to be an Orientation Leader for Summer C-TOPS program and Fall Residence Area Orienta tion in Union 209. Applications are available only at the interest session. 7 p.m. Carolina Campus Civitan, a community service organization, will hold a general interest meeting in Union 211. 6 p.m. Student Government Executive Projects Committee will meet in Union 218. 9 p.m. Straight But Not Narrow will be meeting directly following the B-GLAD meeting. WEDNESDAY 7 p.m. For All the Women Out There Thinking About Applying to Law School: there will be a program by Loretta Deloggio on how to maximize Daily (Ear Hrrl Carolina NORML member Jon Wexler, a sophomore from Deer Park, N.Y., said he originally supported the issue oflegaliz ing marijuana as an environmental issue, but now supports the entire drug issue as well. “(There is) the fact that alcohol is legal; either you have both or you have neither, ” he said. “They tried alcohol prohibition and that didn’t work. I think this year we can defi nitely raise awareness.” The organization already has started meeting goals that it discussed last semes ter at an interest meeting, said Rapp, a junior from Jamestown. These goals include heightening aware ness of the facts about marijuana, active involvement with local legislators and start ing a letter-writing campaign, Rapp said Monday. NORML members also plan to put re ports about marijuana legalization on re serve at the Undergraduate Library for students to read and learn more about the issue. Whiteacre said he hoped students will take the organization and its cause seri ously. When NORML first set up an informa tion booth in the Pit along with other organizations, “everyone would double take my sign and four out of five would snicker,” Whiteacre said. “ 'lsn’t that a hoot? Thepotheads getting active.' But there’s nothing funny about it.” your chances in 103 Bingham. Sponsored by POWER. ITEMS OF INTEREST International Center English Conversation Part ners Workshop for U.S. partners will be held at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday October sth in Union 211. Bring your questions and ideas on conversation partnering. Hear from Diana Levy, a certified ESL instructor and International Center Program Coordinator. Petitions for open Student Congress seats in the Oct. 11 Special Election can be picked up in Suite C of the Union. Petitions are due by Oct. 4. Tickets for a live Chapel Hill show of the na tional Saturday morning radio show “Whad’Ya Know?’’are on sale atthe Carolina Union Box Office with seats beginning at sl6. The show will be at 11 a m. Oct. 22 in Memorial Hall. Call Bill Davis 966- 5454 at WUNC-FM for further information. Americorps! Earn valuable experience, a living allowance and money for your education while help ing teach people to read. Have fon while getting something done. Applications availablenow through Wednesday in the Campus Y. Carolina Students’ Credit Union is now accept ing loan and volunteer applications from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Union 103.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 28, 1994, edition 1
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