Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 8, 1995, edition 1 / Page 4
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4 Wednesday, February 8,1995 Fresh Florida Harris Teeter Strawberry 439 Nonfat 3/400 Glaze l 16 oz. m Yogurt 8 oz.m Southern Valentine # Chocolate ftgy&BZfce Cream WmW% aQQ gggH VJr ' 1/2 gal. SS Na,ural Hunter Farms Truly Merita Chocolate H*2QO Sweet 16 Sugar 1 429 Milk 1/2 ga'& Donuts w oz. l Am ■* &jyOneß^nch Cherry Pie * llPfheel /Selected Varieties^'limUeggjg^sM / Duncan —..— iBSi Duncan Hines Pepsi Or Diet Cake Mix Pepsi Selected Varieties M 18.50 maM M V 6Pkl6 oz. oz. um m tm nrb Freshly Made 18” Roast Beef 4ft49 Valentine 499 Sandwich Balloons .! 1.8. C. Cherry Regular 41*200 Heart Shaped *2£S Root Beer 320'. v Donuts mdmZr Prices Effective Through Feb. 14,1995 Prices In This Ad Effective Wednesday, February 8 Through February 14,1995 In Our Chapel Hill Stores Only.We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. None Sold To Dealers. We Gladly Accept Federal Food Stamps. CHAVIS FROM PAGE 1 “We need it now more than in 1965.” Chavis discussed his role in the creation ofthe National African-American Leader ship Summit, an organization that grew out of the NAACP. “Everyone remembers the picture of Martin and Malcolm shaking hands,” he SBP FROM PAGE 1 racial issues and minority concerns. The candidates began by briefly stating their platforms; they then answered ques tions from facilitator Ellis Carson, newly elected chapter president. Brandenburg said she wanted to increase minority recruitment and retention to cre ate a better learning environment. “You have to start with recruitment,” she said. “Then we can work on changing the cli mate in the classroom.” Cunningham said minority retention was even more important than recruit ment. “Rather than solely target recruit ment, we should also work to graduate them,” he said. Candidate Michael Williams said he thought minority recruitment and gradua tion were key minority issues. Candidate Andrew France said the most important minority issue was dissolving stereotypes. Candidate Robert Simes said he thought that African-American studies should be a department instead of just a curriculum and that minority issues in general needed the help of leadership. JenFiumaraand Jeffßerkaw, co-candi dates, said, “We want to create an open climate and atmosphere. We will listen to concerns and create a plan of action.” The candidates were asked their opin ions about minority issues, including mi r , HOW TO SAVE A FEW BUCKS. (YOU CAN’T LIVE OFF PSYCH EXPERIMENTS ALONE.) I j Buy pizza at closing time. Haggle for slices they’d otherwise just throw away. I Eat Ramen noodles. I Make friends with a Senior. Come June, they’ll be more than glad to give I you their old Poly Sci books and couches. Donate blood. Save a life and get a free lunch to boot. Pick up a Citibank Classic card. There’s no annual fee. .to* MU atsk I Senior Class of 1995 95 Days to Graduation Bash! WHEN? n WHERE? Tonight! atBW-3 February8 th the^>kJ || Breakfast Club CAROLINA Senior Specials! Don’t miss it! UNIVERSITY said. “What if they had worked together?” In the summit, all organizations work together, Chavis said. It is a unifying for mation across organizational lines, reli gious lines and class lines, he said. “I am still a member of the NAACP, and I speak a lot for them,” he said. “I chose nottositbackbuttomoveforward.” Chavis emphasized the need of the edu cational system to fight for equal justice. notify professortenure, the Keith Edwards case and the housekeepers’ movement. The candidates were also asked what they would do to better race relations. “We need to make (improving race rela tions) more of a high-profile issue,” Will iams said. “One way to do this is to estab lish a committee of diverse interest.” Cunningham said that one way to im prove race relations was to allow groups to work together. “The student body presi dent can work in small ways to bring black groups and white groups together,” he said. “ Student groups can work together to plan events, such as they did when Alvin Poussaint spoke earlier this year.” Simes and France also said getting dif ferent groups to meet together would im prove race relations. Brandenburg said she wanted to im prove race relations by holding more hu man relations summits. The candidates all said the black vote, and the NAACP’s support in particular, was important to them. “I am committed to the issues of minori ties and the NAACP,” Brandenburg said. “I am involved, and I do care.” Cunningham said that he was commit ted to minority issues and that he thought the black vote was important. “I am con cerned about the black vote," he said. “I have taken and will continue to take an out-reached hand approach, accepting sup port from anyone who will give it. I will continue to fight against discrimination.” ffifjp Saily ffiar Brcl He criticized The Carolina Review, a conservative publication, for its use of bias. “Their cartoons and ... drawings of the African-American race are deliberate.” He concluded his talk with the media by addressing Chancellor Paul Hardin. “Please tell Chancellor Hardin that I would like to talk to him. I know he’s a good chancellor, but I want to make him a better chancellor.” E-MAIL FROM PAGE 1 selves. “We usually give them the benefit of the doubt,” Gogan said. Currently OIT is unsure about what steps it will take to protect the privacy of UNC students on-line. “One thing we don’t want to do is take the path other universities have taken and make people change their passwords every month or two,” Gogan said. He said he believed that changing pass words frequently would be detrimental to security in the end. “If you make people change their pass words all the time, they tend to forget what they are and start putting a Post-It note on the monitor to remind them of the current password,” Gogan said. “We wind up less secure than what we started with." ISIS, the e-mail system containing a majority of the e-mail accounts of Univer sity faculty and students, can be used to change students’ passwords. A message will greet ISIS users on the startup screen informing them of the prob lem and giving instructions about how to change passwords. Students can either use the option “0” on the ISIS menu, or they can enter the command “passwd” at a % prompt. They can then follow the directions on the screen. © 1995 Citibank (South Dakota). N.A.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 8, 1995, edition 1
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