Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 8, 1994, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 Tuesday, November 8,1994 TUESDAY II a.m. Bone Marrow Drive win be held until 2 p.m. in Union 205-206. NOON Blood Drive will be held until 2 p.m. in the Great Hall Sponsored by Newman Catholic Student Center. 12:30 p.m. “Men’s Roles in Rape Prevention,’’ win be discussed in Union 205 as part of Rape Awareness Week. 3 p.m. Lesbian Support Group: An affirmative environment to discuss and receive support around relevant issues will be held in 106 Nash Hall. Call 962-2175 for more information. Sponsored by Uni versity Counseling Center. 5 p.m. UNC Japan Club presents: "Japanese Ceremonies of Peace and War: Toward the 50th Anniversary of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,” in Union 224. Jan Bardsley will speak. 7 p.m. Men’s Volleyball vs. Duke will be held in Carmichael Auditorium. CHispA will meet in the lower level of the Union to go bowling. Please bring $2. All are welcome! Christian Science Organization will meet in 210 Dey Hall. 7:30 p.m. Pre-Vet Club will meet in2o4 Peabody. Mrs. Waters, an admissions officer at NCSU College of Veterinary Medicine, will address important ad- CAMPAIGN FROM PAGE 1 voters. Instead, he spent time Monday and today putting up signs at all the polls as well as appearing at some polls. He also visited county stores Monday to talk to voters one-on-one. “It is up to the voters at this point,” Crowther said. “Voters are in control, and candidates have to recognize m i I 1m ) --J] *—; i -f- ••* 1, '„irrir “yw . • i *— apcßr 'gl 1■ g I |P MMI. ! ■ -■ caLar C \ n | r. J.\■ J ■ ■ i■ / : J , ~; ■ : :: . ” '' 1 v \j! ■ > |f £f.’- * ';,; v : f .' •~' .lj ■£ * V.C'j ii. MML mm Mfptf pM j lf fe|l :t ** ,|0& ■a' '' :>■; V ?• 'RLstily k ff | m Jg {.- .|F® l*a 4| J| HBBp l '' Jy ~ill P W& ■ sjr g§| gg gg a■ .*%ylvf 1* iM JT® !■ %p Ur te w #%li a l 4' W .- .".' -~ AllO H# | Ol %JP 101 8,8 bLm M mjj§ O ' ..-■■ MP* ■> .-*. • B'3Wr! 1i.<6~ Campus Calendar missions issues. 8 p.m. “Royal Knights: A Tribute to the Afri can-American Male,” will be held in Carmichael dorm ballroom to show appreciation and love to the black men ofUNC. Sponsored by Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. “The Accused” will be playing in the Union auditonum as part of Rape Awareness Week. Spon sored by CUAB Film Committee. Natural Resource Group will meet in Union 226. WEDNESDAY NOON “Playing the Game,” will be shown in Union 205 as part of Rape Awareness Week. 2 p.m. Want a rush? Come join us in the Pit for a poetry reading from four fantastic English depart ment faculty members no anthology, no survey course, just some of the greatest poetry of the English language! 4:30 p.m. Attention all IR majors! Sherry HiD, a UNC graduate from Exide Electronics, will speak in Union 206. sp.m. Search Committee Forum forthepositions of chancellor.and vice chancellor will be held until 7 p.m. in the Black Cultural Center. Come get involved in service learning! a .p.p.l.e.s. will hold an interest/training meeting in the Frank Porter Graham lounge for all those interested in the power of the vote rather than the power of campaigning in all elections.” Bill Apple, a candidate for sheriff, plans on staying home and watching television tonight until the vote is calculated. In his last-minute campaigning, Apple replaced some stolen signs and made sure there were representatives at the polls. He said he planned to appear at as many polls as possible on election day. “I think 10 to UNIVERSITY & CITY working on course development and reflection for spring semester courses. 6 p.m. UNC Roller Rangers will meet in the Pit for street hockey. 6:30 p.m. “TAKE BACK THE NIGHT” march will meet in the Pit as part of Rape Awareness Week Do you often use caffeine tottayuplateortopep you up in the mornings? If so, come to a presentation on “Sleep Deprivation and the Effects of Caffeine” on the second floor of Carmichael dorm. Sponsored by the Health Sciences Living and Learning Pro gram. POWER - A group of people organized for women’s empowerment and rights will meet in the Pit. Come take back the night! 7 p.m. Yum! Yum! You should come! Join CUAB for a vegetarian stir-fry cooking class in the Cabaret. Sign up at the Union desk “Dental Nutrition Awareness in the Black Com munity,” will be presented by Dr. Minnie McNary, UNC nutritionist and Jean Woods, D.D.S., in Union 224. Sponsored by Delta Sigma Theta as part of Health in the Black Community week 7:30p.m. “MediaßiasandltsEffectsonGcnder and Race,” will be held in 100 Hamilton Hall. Norman Solomon will speak Sponsored by Critical Issues Committee (CUAB). 20 percent of the people are undecided going in, and last-minute efforts may sway some of those votes,” Apple said. All campaigning is important, Hobbs said. He was preparing for today’s elec tions by making sure representatives were at the polls. Also, Hobbs and his staff talked to supporters on the phone and in person. “Wecan’twinaloneonlast-minute campaigning,” Hobbs said. “It’s impor- PUBLIC HOUSING FROM PAGE 1 need to provide a good place to live.” Public housing is allotted $1,048,000 annually in the town budget, said Chapel Hill Town Manager Cal Horton. These funds cover many expenses, Horton said. “This budget goes to maintaining build ings and providing for collection of rent,” he said. “It is for all of the things involved in managing an apartment building.” There are 336 units in 13 different public housing complexes in Chapel Hill, Horton said. One of the major problems facing pub lic housing today is a lack of organization, Shirer said. “Each year the council sets goals to work towards,” she said. One of the goals of the council this year is to bring the community together, Shirer said. “The community is not organized,” she said. “Organizing the community will be a hard job. People don’t want to come out.” tant to get people to vote, and we won’t stop until 7:30.” Most people have made up their minds by now. The challenge is to get people to the polls to vote, he said. Richard Hammer, a candidate for Or ange County commissioner, said one thing he didn’t like about politics was campaign strategies. “If I’m elected it’s because of what I stand for, and the people know it.” BCC FROM PAGE 1 confusion across the state.” The committee discussed groups that could be approached in the search for fund ing, Cole said. He said possible target groups included the black community in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro area and former students of Stone. Stone was an associate professor in the curriculum of African- American studies until her death in 1991. The BCC has a strong base of support both inside and outside of UNC, McCormick said. “We have a committed group of distinguished people outside the University who will help us raise this money,” he said. “We have a unified com mitment within the University as well.” At the beginning of the meeting, four of the five campaign leaders met with Univer sity leaders to discuss possible strategies for approaching potential donors. The four campaign leaders present were Maya Angelou, Dean Smith, Bob Eubanks and Jack Tate. Deloris Jordan, also a cam paign leader, was unable to attend due to a case of strep throat, McCormick said. Afterward, the campaign leaders and the larger special gifts committee joined in a luncheon meeting. McCormick said that at the meeting they watched presentations by students about current BCC projects, including Communiversity and the Cross Cultural Communications Institute. uUjf lath} Car Hpfl ELECTIONS FROM PAGE 1 We intend to work to provide the people of the 16th District with the best representa tive government possible,” Hobbs said. Little, also a Southern Pines resident, said education was one of her main con cerns. She served on the Moore County Board of Education for eight years and was a teacher before becoming a private business owner. Voters also will be responsible for choos ing two judges to sit on the N.C. Supreme Court. These races have not been widely pub licized because these candidates, ike all judicial candidates in North Carolina, are prohibited from talking about issues dur ing the campaign. In the first race, former N.C. Supreme Court Justice I. Beverly Lake is running against the woman who ousted him two years ago. Sarah Parker, a Charlotte lawyer and current state Supreme Court justice, beat Lake when they ran against each other for the same seat-in 1992. Lake, a former state senator, is a Repub lican and Parker is a Democrat. In the other race for a seat on the N.C. Supreme Court, incumbent Republican Bob Orr is being challenged by Jim Fuller, a Democratic lawyer from Raleigh. Two seats on theN.C. Court of Appeals are also up for grabs. In the first race, Republican Mark Mar tin is trying to unseat incumbent Democrat Elizabeth McCrodden. McCrodden, a former assistant attor ney general, was appointed by Gov. Hunt to the Court of Appeals. She is the only woman on the court. Martin is serving as a Superior Court judge after having been appointed by former Gov. Martin. In the other Court of Appeals race, Republican candidate Ralph Walker is looking to return to the Court of Appeals, where he briefly served before being de feated in 1992. He has 22 years of civil and criminal court experience as a trial lawyer, and he has served for 10 years as a judge on the Family and Superior courts. Walker’s opponent, Charlotte lawyer Sydnor Thompson, will reach mandatory retirement age in 1996. If elected, Thompson would be replaced then by a governor-appointed judge who would serve an additional full term. Voters in Orange County will be choos ing Superior Court judges even though there is not a seat up for election in this district. UntilarecentdecisionbyaU.S. District Court, Superior Court judges were chosen in a statewide election rather than just in the district over which they will preside. This year,.because of the ruling, indi vidual districts will choose their own judges. However, since the ruling could still be appealed, the votes will still be taken in Orange County for judges in other dis tricts. NURSE OPPORTUNITIES NURSING AT ITS FINEST. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 8, 1994, edition 1
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