2
Thursday, February 16,1995
Speaker Discusses Terrors of Bosnian Life
BYERIKA MEYERS
C STAFF WRITER
* The UNC Muslim Students’ Associa
• tion sponsored a lecture Wednesday de
picting the atrocities currently occurring in
' Bosnia.
The speaker, Gen. Halil Puksar, is the
president and founder of the Bosnian Re
lief Fund USA Inc. Puksar, who lives in
Chicago with his wife and five children,
was bom in Bosnia and emigrated to the
United States in the early 19705.
The lecture, “Bosnia Today,” took place
in the Carmichael Residence Hall Ball
room.
When the ethnic cleansing began in
Bosnia in 1992, Puksar gave up his busi
ness to help the Bosnian Muslims, he said.
He is a Bosnian Muslim, and he said he
wanted to help people with whom he was
able to identify in culture, religion and
upbringing.
Gvitan International Spreads Service to New UNC Chapter
BYOLMAPAGE
STAFF WRITER
Civitan International, agroup dedicated
to public service and community projects,
has been active since 1917.
Carolina Campus Civitan, a branch of
the worldwide organization, has only been
around for a few months, but it will strive
to achieve many of the same goals as the
parent organization.
Senior Civitans, which sponsors chap
ters on college campuses, encourages the
junior clubs to participate in the service
projects they are conducting. Junior and
senior high school students have the op
portunity to join Junior Civitan Clubs.
Campus clubs plan their own activities
and service projects as well.
Worldwide Civitan International boasts
55,000 men, women and teenagers as mem
bers.
Carolina Campus Civitan is on a much
smaller scale, consisting of 40 members.
CONGRESS
FROM PAGE 1
But some new congress members don’t
think inexperience will hurt their perfor
mance . “There’s been somewhat of a dead
lock in the workings between the executive
branch and Student Congress,” said David
Moricca, Dist. 15.
“I think this fresh blood of freshmen
and sophomores coming in represent open
ears and lines of communication between
the executive branch and the legislative
branch. The only way to get things done is
to have both branches working together on
similar goals,” he said.
Moricca said he thought the new repre-
UNC Summer School Presents...An abbreviated list of the 1995 Summer Courses! Plan Ahead!
COMING IN MARCH!!
SUMMER SCHOOL CATALOG
& CLASS LISTING
Swimmer Session Dato Register for Summer School when you
Ist Session: May 18-June 23 pre-register for Fall. Graduating Seniors
2nd Session: June 27-Aug. 1 apply through Summer School.
Catalogs available in Hanes Hall & Department Offices
Forfurther information come by 200 Pettigrew Hall or Call 966-4364
I FIRST SUMMER SESSION 1995
AFAM (AFRO-AMERICAN STUDIES)
AFAM 040 BLACK EXPERIENCE
AFAM 041 BLACK EXPERIENCE
AFAM 094A BLK ARTS & BLK AESTH
AFRI (AFRICAN STUDIES)
AFRIO4O INTRO AFRICAN CIV
AFRI 065 AFRICAN POLI/ECON
AMST (AMERICAN STUDIES)
AMST 020 EMERAMER CULT
A NTH (ANTHROPOLOGY)
ANTH 023 HABITAT & HUMANITY
ANTH 043 HUMAN EVOL & ADAPT
ANTH 151 FIELD SCHOOLARCH
ANTH 196 GARDENS OF JAPAN
ART (ART)
ART 001 BASIC DRAW & COMP
ART 002 3-D DES/INTRO SCULP
ART 013 LIFE SCULPT
ART 015 PAINTING I
ART 031 HIST OF WEST ART
ART 038 SURV MODERN ART
ART 043 AMERICAN ART
ART 045 PAINTING II
ART 065 PAINTING 111
ART 068 SPEC TOPICS STUDIO
ART 072 IMPRESS 4 SYMBOLISM
ART 075 20TH CENTURY ART
ART 085 PAINTING IV
ART 100 INDIV STUD PAINTING
ART 105 PAINTING V
ART 125 PAINTING VI
ART 155 PAINTING VII
ART 175 PAINTING VIII
ART 192 GARDENS OF JAPAN
ASIA (ASIAN STUDIES)
CHIN 50 INTRO TO CHINESE CIV
ASIA 199 INTRO TO JAPANESE LIT
ASTR (ASTRONOMY)
ASTRO3I DESCRIPT ASTRONOMY
ASTR 031 L DESCRIPT ASTR LAB
BIOL (BIOLOGY)
BIOL 010 ISSUES MODERN BIOL
BIOL 011 PRINCIPLES OF BIOL
BIOL 011 INTRO BIOL LAB
BIOL 052 CELL & DEVEL BIOL
BIOL 053 MOLEC BIOL 4 GENET
BIOL 054 ECOLOGY 4 POP BIOL
BIOL 062 INITRO PHYSIOLOGY
BIOL 062 L PHYSIOLOGY LAB
BIOL 080 BIOLOGY OF INSECTS
BIOL 080 L INSECT BIOLOGY LAB
BIOL 130 INTRO TO BIOL CHEM
BUSI (BUSINESS)
8U51024 INTRO MANAGEMNT SCI
BUSI 071 BASIC ACCTG PRNCPLS
BUSIIOO COMMUNICATIONS
BUSII3O OPERATIONS MGMT
BUSII4O LEG ENVIRON OF BUSI
BUSII4I COMMERCIAL ALW
BUSIISO ORG BEHAVIOR
8U51157 PERSONNEL MGMT
BUSII6O PRINC OF MARKETING
BUSIIBI ADVERTISING
BUSII7O MANAGEMENT ACCTG
BUSIIBO PRIN FINANCIAL MGT
BUSII9O ADMIN POLICY
CHEM (CHEMISTRY)
CHEM 11 GEN DESCRIP CHEM I
CHEM 11L QUANT CHEM LAB I
CHEM 041 ANALYTICAL METHODS
CHEM 041 L LAB ORG/ANALY 810
CHEM 061 INTRO ORG CHEM I
CHEM 062 INTRO ORG CHEM II
CHEM 062 L LAB ORGANIC CHEM
CHEM 180 INTRO TO BIOPHYSICAL CHEM
CLAS (CLASSICS)
CLAS 033 AGE OF PERICLES
Puksar strongly and repeatedly asserted
that all people came from one mother and
father. “We must understand what human
life means in the eyes of God,” he said.
Bosnia-Herzegovina was formerly apart
of communist Yugoslavia. It is a primarily
Muslim region and is one of the five re
gions that became Yugoslavia after World
Warff.
After communism fell in 1990, Yugo
slavia dissolved into five separate states:
Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia, Macedonia and
Bosnia. The reason for this separation is
that the borders of Yugoslavia had not
taken into account the differences in na
tionality between the people living in each
region, Puksar said.
In 1992, fighting broke out between the
Serbians and the Bosnians. The United
States, following a policy of isolation,
placed an embargo on Bosnia.
“We all know what happened in the
Second World War in Germany. Now it is
Students who join the campus group auto
matically become members of Civitan In
ternational and, as such, have to pay an
nual international and club dues.
“Civitan focuses on personal and pro
fessional development while improving the
community through service," said Ginny
Gamble, a junior from Haw River who
spearheaded efforts to bring a Civitan Club
to UNC and who serves as the group’s
president.
“It really took a lot of hard work to
charter the club,” Gamble said. “I just felt
that UNC needed one of its own. Campus
Civitan is great because it is specifically
designed to meet the needs of a college
student. The location is right on campus,
and the time requirements are minimal.”
While many colleges have Campus
Civitans, the UNC club, sponsored by
Chapel Hill Civitan and the Creative
Civitan Club ofDurham, is the first Civitan
to be chartered at a school of this size,
Gamble said.
sentatives would add a fresh perspective to
Student Congress. “They’ll go into con
gress with a fresh mind, not worn down by
a year of problems in congress. They’re
going to actually work for the students. It’s
going to affect them, too, because they’re
going to be here for the next two to three
years.”
Daniel Martin agreed. “Ithinkit’sgood.
There is a need for change. It seems like
we’ve had some of the same people going
in year after year. With the problems the
student body sees they’re having, that's
why they’ve elected these new people to
come in and change the guard,” he said.
Martin, elected Tuesday to represent
Dist. 11, said he thought rookie congress
CURL (COMPARATIVE LITERATURE)
CMPL 022 GREAT BOOKS II
COMM (COMMUNICATION STUDIES)
COMM 013 PUBLIC SPEAKING
COMM 022 INTRO INTERPER COMM
COMM 023 SMALL GROUP COMM
COMM 024 GENDER COMMUNICAT
COMM 034 aiM/VIDEO PROD
COMM 041 MEDIA CRITICISM
COMM 060INTRO/PERF OF LIT
COMM 061 INTRO TO GROUP PERF
COMM 063 PERF AFRO/AF-AM LIT
COMM 080 CULTURAL DIVERSITY
COMM 126 NONVERBAL COMM
COMM 229 HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS
COMP (COMPUTER SCIENCE)
COMP 004 COMPIPWR TOOLS/MIND
COMP 014 INTRO PROGRAMMING
COMP 096 COMPUTERS & SOCIETY
DRAM (DRAMATIC ART)
DRAM 015 ELEMENTS OF DRAMA
DRAM 016 ELEMENTS OF THEATRE
DRAM 020 PLAY ANALYSIS
DRAM 035 ACTING/NON-MAJORS
DRAM 056 MVMT FOR THE ACTOR
DRAM 060 STAGECRAFT
ECON (ECONOMICS)
ECON 010 ECON: INTRO
ECON 070 ECONOMIC STATISTICS
ECON 091 WOMEN AND ECON
ECON 100 APPLIED MICRO
ECON 101 MICRO THEORY
ECON 130 MACRO THRY & POLICY
ECON 132 IN TH/MONEY INC EMP
ECON 141 ANALY PUBLIC FIN
ECON 159 HIST/ECON DOCTRINES
ECON 163 ECON DEVELOPMENT
ECON 165 FINANCIAL MARKETS
ECON 190 ECON OF LABOR REL
EDCI (EDUCATION CURR A INSTRUCT)
EDCIIBO METH TCHG ESL
EOFO (EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATIONS)
EDFO 120 SOC FOUND AM EDUC
EDFO 180 STATISTICS I
EDFO 201 PSY LEARNING SCHOOL
EDFO 380 STATISTICS 111
EDSP (EDUCATION, SPECIALIZED PROFESSIONAL PONS)
EDSP 201 THEORIES OF COUNSELING
EDSP 209ISSUES/ORG GUD SERV
EDSP 224 PRNT/FMLY HNDCP CHD
EDUC (EDUCATION)
EDUC 054 SOC CNCPTS PR AM ED
EDUC 065 TEACH PROFESSION
EDUC 066 PLAN FOR TEACHING
EDUC 072 PSY OF LEARNING
EDUC 153 CONT RDNG WRTNG
ENGL (ENGLISH)
ENGL 011 ENG COMP 8 RHETORIC
ENGL 012 ENG COMP 8 RHETORIC
ENGL 020 NEG LIT/MID AGE/18C
ENGL 021 ENG LIT 19TH-20TH C
ENGL 023 INTRO TO FICTION
ENGL 024 CONTEMPUT
ENGL 052 CHAUCER
ENGL 054 16TH-CENT ENGL LIT
ENGL 066 PROSE/POET CLAS PER
ENGL 072 CHIEF ROMANTC POETS
ENGL 081 AMER LIT 1865-1930
ENGL 083 THE AMERICAN NOVEL
ENGL 084 AFRO-AM LIT TO 1950
ENGL 15416TH CENT ENGL LIT
ENGL 166 ENG LIT 1700-1780
ENGL 172 ROMANTIC PERIOD
FREN (FRENCH)
FREN 001 ELEMENTARY FRENCH
REN 002 ELEMENARY FRENCH
FREN 003 INTERMEDIATE RENCH
REN 040 R THEA IN TRANSLAT
FREN 101 X ELEM FRE/GRAD/STU
GEOG (GEOGRAPHY)
GEOG 010 PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
GEOG 020 WORLD REGIONS
GEOG 023 CULTURAL LANDSCAPES
GEOG 166 EASTERN ASIA
GEOG 168 AFRICA
GEOG 173 SPATIAL DATA REPRES
GEOL (GEOLOGY)
GEOLOII INTRO GEOL
GEOLOIIL INTRO GEOL L
GERM (GERMAN)
GERM 001 ELEM GERMAN
GERM 003 INTER GERMAN
GERM 046 STUDIES IN GERM LIT
HIST (HISTORY)
HIST 011 HIST OF WES CIV I
HIST 021 AM HIST T 01865
HIST 022 AM HIST SINCE 1865
HIST 031 RUSSIA 1861-PRESENT
HIST 067 NC HIST SINCE 1865
HIST 074 AM WEST, 1800-PRES
HIST 088 JAPAN SINCE 1945
HIST 089 PEACE 8 WAR
HIST 090 TOPICS IN HISTORY
HIST 145 AMER COLONIAL EXPER
HIST 148 CIVIL WAR AMERICA
INLS (INFORMATION 8 ÜBRARY SCI)
INLS 102 INTRO TO COMPUTING
INLS 201 RESEARCH METHODS
INTS (INTERNATIONAL STUDIES)
INTS 77 GLOBAL ISSUES
INTS 80 SOCIAL THY 8 CULT DIVER
ITAL (ITALIAN)
ITALOOI ELEM ITALIAN
JOMC (JOURNALISM 8 MASS CO)
JOMC 011 WORLD OF MASS COMM
JOMC 053 NEWS WRITING
JOMC 054 REPORTING
JOMC 057 NEWS EDITING
JOMC 085 GRAPHIC DESIGN
JOMC 112 BUCK PRESS 8 US HIST
JOMC 130 PRINCIPLES OF PR.
JOMC 164 INTRO MASS COMM UW
JOMC 170 PRINC OF ADVERTIS
JOMC 191 PROSEM IN CONT JOUR
UTN (UTIN)
UTN 001 ELEM UTIN
UNG (LINGUISTICS)
LING 030 INTRO TO LANG
LSRA (LEISURE STUDIES/RECREATION ADM
LSRAOIO INTRO LEISURE SERV
LSRA 101 WOMEN, WORK 8 LEISURE
LTAM (UTIN AMERICAN STUOIES)
LTAM 160 INTEN YUCATEC MAYA
MATH (MATHEMATICS)
MATH 010 ALGEBRA
MATH 017 FINITE MATHEMATICS
MATH 018 SELECTED TOPICS
MATH 022 CALCULUS BUS/SS
MATH 030 TRIG/ANAL GEOMETRY
MATH 031 CALC FUNC ONE VAR I
MATH 032 CAL FUNC ONE VAR II
MATH 033 CALC FUNC SEV VAR
MATH 081 DISCRETE MATH
MATH 083 LIN/ALGDIFFEQ
MATH 121 ADV CALCULUS I
MATH 134 ELE OF MOD ALGEBRA
MATH 147 MATRIX THEORY
MUSC (MUSIC)
MUSCOO7P CONCERT BAND
MUSC 0088 UNIVERSITY CHORUS
MUSC 020 FUND MUS CLASSR
MUSC 021 FUND OF MUSIC I
MUSC 045 INTRO TO JAZZ
MUSC 088 ORCHESTRA MUSIC
MUSC 2088 UNIVERSITY CHORUS
UNIVERSITY
“We all know what happened
in the Second World War in
Germany. Now it is happening
again, andpeople just bow
their heads and keep
sleeping. ”
GEN. HAUL PUKSAR
President of Bosnian Relief Fund USA
Inc.
happening again, and people just bow their
heads and are sleeping,” Puksarsaid.
The Bosnia Relief Fund raises money
and collects supplies in order to aid the
people suffering in Bosnia, he said. He said
he put his life in danger by bringing the
supplies there. So far, Puksar said, he has
made 5 trips. He will soon make his sixth
“We hope for a lot of interaction with
other colleges such as ECU, UNC-C and
Mars Hill,” she said. “Hopefully, we can
also become involved with the Junior
Civitan Club at Chapel Hill High.”
Campus Civitan is smaller than most
other service organizations on UNC’s cam
pus. Gamble said this was advantageous
because the members could become in
volved with one another on a more per
sonal level.
“A lot ofpeople come from high schools
where they were in service clubs, ” she said.
“They want to become involved here, but
they haven’t yet found their niche.”
Heather Overfield, a freshman from
Raleigh, said Civitan allowed members to
express themselves.
“We’re more personal; if you have an
idea, we can make it happen,” she said.
Civitan’s primary focus is on children,
especially those with handicaps. Campus
Civitan plans to work with the Special
Olympics as its major project for this year.
members would learn quickly. “At the
beginning, it might cause some trouble,
but after a while it will hopefully bring
some new ideas to Student Congress.”
Ethics committee Chairman Roy
Granato, who was elected to his fourth
term, said he was looking forward to the
next congress session. “I’m really pleased
that we got a whole new slew of members.
We’re going to have a great year in student
government,” he said.
Granato said he was excited that many
graduate students had run as write-in can
didates. “Graduate students are one-third
of the student population. It’s about time
they were represented in Student Con
gress. “
PWAO (PEACE, WAR, 8 DEFENSE)
PWAD 78 PEACE 8 WAR
PWAD 148 CIVIL WAR 8 RECONST
PHIL (PHILOSOPHY)
PHIL 020 INTRO: MAIN PROBS
PHIL 021 INTRO SYMBOL LOGIC
PHIL 022 INTRO ETHICS
PHIL 032 PHILOSOPHY RELIGION
PHIL 033 PHIL PROB ABOUT ART
PHIL 034 BIOETHICS
PHIL 046 PHIL ISSU/FEMINISM
PHIL 056 ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY
PHIL 058 MODERN PHILOSOPHY
PHYA (PHYSICAL EDUCATION, REQUIRED ACT.)
PHYA 011 AEROBIC DANCE
PHYA 013 GOLF
PHYA 017 BEGINNING JAZZ
PHYA 019 BEGINNING MOD DANCE
PHYA 020 RACQUETBALL
PHYA 027 BEGINNING SWIMMING
PHYA 029 BEGINNING TENNIS
PHYA 033 WEIGHT TRAINING
PHYE (PHYSICAL EDUC., EXERCISE 8 SPORT MEO)
PHYE 041 PERSONAL HEALTH
PHYE 074 HELP PE ELEM SCHL
PHYE 075 ANATOMY
PHYE 076 PHYSIOLOGY
PHYE 077 HIST-PRIN PHYE
PHYE 080 MOTOR SKILL LEARN
PHYE 081 SPORT PSYCH/SOC
PHYE 088 EMERGENCY CARE
PHYE 099 CURRENT ISSUES IN PE
PHYS (PHYSICS 8 ASTRONOMY)
PHYS 020 BASIC CONCEPTS PHYS
PHYS 020 LABORATORY
PHYS 024 GENERAL PHYSICS
PHYS 024 LAB
PHYS 026 MECHANICS
PHYS 026 L LAB
PHYS 124 PHYS H/SCH TEACHERS
PLAN (CITY 8 REGIONAL PLANNING)
PLAN 046 INTRO TO PLANNING
POU (POLITICAL SCIENCE)
POLIO4I INTRO TO GOVT IN US
P0L1053 POLITICS IN ENGLAND
POLI 056 CONT LAT AM POLI
POLI 061 MAJ ISS POL THEORY
POU 064 INT POL/THT/MAR/MOD
POU 066 POLI PSYC
POU 067 FEMINISM POL THEORY
POLI 071 INTRO PUB POL ANAL
POU 072 WOMEN 8 POLITICS
POLI 081 PROBLMS IN WRLD ORD
POLI 086 INTERN REL WRLD POL
P0L1123 GOVT/POLITICS/JAPAN
POLII7I RACE POV/POLITICS
PORT (PORTUGUESE)
PORT 001 ELEM PORT
PORT 035 MOD BRAZ LIT/ENG TR
PSYC (PSYCHOLOGY)
PSYC 010 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY
PSYC 020 INTRO COGNITIVE PSYC
PSYC 023 BIOPSYCHOLOGY
PSYC 024 CHILD DEVELOPMENT
PSYC 028 PERSONALITY
PSYC 030 STAT PRIN PSYC RES
PSYC 033 SOCIAL PSYC
PSYC 050 LAB RESEARCH/PSYC
PSYC 080 BEHAVIOR DISORDERS
PSYC 100 THINKING/COGNITION
PSYC 106 PHYSIOLOG PSYCHOL
PUPA (PUBLIC POLICY ANALYSIS)
PUPA 071 INTRO PUB POL ANAL
RELI (REUGIOUS STUDIES)
RELIOIO WORLD RELIGIONS
RELI 022 INTRO/NEW TEST LIT
RELI 032 PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION
RELI 058 JESUS/MYTH/TRAD/HIS
RELI 068 RELI,LIT,ART AMER
RELII63 RELI DIMEN OF JAPAN CULT
RELII9O RELIG 8 SOC
RUSS (RUSSIAN)
RUSS 1-2INTENS ELEM RUSSIAN
SOCI (SOCIOLOGY)
SOCIOIO AMER SOC
SOCI 011 HUMAN SOC
SOCI 012 SOCIAL INTERACTION
SOCI 015 REG SOC OF SOUTH
SOCI 020 SOC PROBLMS
SOCI 022 BLK-WHT REL IN US
SOCI 023 CRIME AND DELIN
SOCI 030 FAM AND SOC
SOCI 033 SOC OF POLITICS
SOCI 050 SOCIOL THEORY
SOCI 052 DATA ANAL SOC RES
SOCI 080 CULTURAL DIVERSITY
SOCIIIO FORMAL ORG 8 BURCY
SOCIIIS ECON AND SOC
SOCII2I RELIGION 8 SOC
SOCII3I AGING
journey, he said.
Puksar said he had collected more than
2000 color photographs that depicted the
situation in Bosnia.
Pictures were displayed at the lecture.
They showed the genocide of the people,
and they showed dead babies, children and
adults, their bodies burned, butchered and
beaten beyond recognition. There were
also photographs of destroyed mosques
and homes and mass graveyards.
The “ethnic cleansing” is nowhere near
its end unless the Bosnian Muslims receive
help, Puksar said. More than 325,000
people have been killed; 1,250 mosques
have been destroyed; and 60,000 women
have been raped, he said.
Inadditiontohiswork with the Bosnian
Relief Fund, Puksar has written a book,
“The Muslim Struggle in Bosnia: A Story
of Courage and Brave Victory for the Re
vival of Islam.” The book relates Puksar’s
experiences in his journeys to Bosnia.
It also plans to participate in Community
Service Week.
“This is our formative year; we’re just
trying to get in the swing of things,” Gamble
said. “Our focus for this semester is on
getting to know one another as a group.
We’ll also concentrate on fund-raisers.”
Civitan also provides professional net
working for its members. Each member is
paired with a professional in the field ofhis
or her choice. The member can then gain
valuable experience through interaction
with the professional, Gamble said.
“Civitan is an exchange of ideas,” she
said. “Members gain leadership experi
ence while making friends and helping the
community.”
Carolina Campus Civitan meets at 6
p.m. on the second and fourth Tuesdays of
each month in Union 208. Usually, the
meetings involve an event such as a speaker
who discusses a timely issue, Gamble said.
The district governor of Civitan will speak
at the next meeting, which will be Feb. 28.
Black History Month
Spotlight
The Rev. Alexander Crummell
Bom a free man of “unmixed” African blood,
Alexander Crummell was a priest at the Episco
pal Church. After completing his theological
training at the Episcopal Seminary in Boston,
Crummell left the United States and moved to
England in hopes of finding a more sympathetic
and unbiased social atmosphere.
In Africa, Crummell published his reflections
on race issues. His essays and letters were col
lected in 1862 in “The Future of Africa.”
Crummell returned to post-Civil War America
in 1873 only to be further disillusioned by the
declining condition of African Americans in the
South.
SOWO (SOCIAL WORK)
SOWO 203INSTIT DESCRIMIN
SOWO 224 SW W/WK GP, OR, COM
SOWO 252 ALCOHOL & SUB DEP
SOWO 350 SEM/SPEC PRACTICE
SPAN (SPANISH)
SPAN 001 ELEM SPANISH
SPAN 002 ELEM SPANISH
SPAN 003 INTERMEDIATE SPAN
SPAN 035 CONTEM LA AM PROSE
SPAN 046 CERVANTES ENG TRANS
STAT (STATISTICS)
STAT 011 BA CPT STAT/DA ANAL
STAT 023 PROB-STAT FOR BUSI
WMST (WOMENS STUDIES)
WMST 046 PHIL ISSU/FEMINISM
WMST 056 GENDER COMM
WMST 067 FEMINISM POL THEORY
WMST 072 WOMEN AND POLITICS
WMST 091 WOMEN AND ECON
WMST 101 WOMEN, WORK & LEISURE
SECOND SUMMER SESSION 1995
AFAM (AFRO-AMERICAN STUDIES)
AFAM 040 BLACK EXPERIENCE
AFAM 041 BLACK EXPERIENCE
AFAM 063 AFRICAN BELIEF SYS:
AFAM 174 KEY ISS/AFRI/AFRO L
AFRI (AFRICAN STUDIES)
AFRI 040 INTRO AFRICAN CIV
AFRII74 KEY ISS/AFRI/AFRO L
AMST (AMERICAN STUDIES)
AMST 040 INTRO AMER STUDIES
ANTH (ANTHROPOLOGY)
ANTH 020 EXPRESSIVE CULTURES
ANTH 041 GEN ANTHROPOLOGY
ANTH 044 HUMAN DILEMMAS
ANTH 130 NATIVE N AMER CUL
ANTH 132 LATIN AMER CULT
ART (ART)
ART 001 BASIC DRAW & COMP
ART 002 3-D DES/INTRO SCULP
ART 015 PAINTING I
ART 030 HIST ARCHITECTURE
ART 032 HIST OF WEST ART
ART 033 ANCIENT SURVEY
ART 045 PAINTING II
ART 064 WOMEN VISUAL ARTS I
ART 065 PAINTING 111
ART 068 SPEC TOPICS STUDIO
ART 076 CONTEMPORARY ART
ART 085 PAINTING IV
ART 105 PAINTING V
ART 125 PAINTING VI
ART 155 PAINTING VII
ART 175 PAINTING VIII
BIOL (BIOLOGY)
BIOL 011 PRINCIPLES OF BIOL
BIOL 011 L INTRO BIOLOGY LAB
BIOL 045 FUND/HUM ANAT/PHYS
BIOL 052 CELL & DEVEL BIOL
BIOL 052 RECITATION
BIOL 054 ECOLOGY & POP BIOL
BIOL 054 RECITATION
BIOL 063 L VERT STRUC-EVOL LAB
BIOL 073 ANIMAL BEHAVIOR
BIOL 073 L ANIMAL BEHAVIOR LAB
BUSI (BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION)
BUSI 024 INTRO MANAGEMNT SCI
BUSI 071 BASIC ACCTG PRNCPLS
BUSIIOO COMMUNICATIONS
BUSII3O OPERATIONS MGMT
BUSII4O LEG ENVIRON OF BUSI
8U51142 MANAGERIAL LAW
BUSIISO ORG BEHAVIOR
BUSII6O PRINC OF MARKETING
BUSII7O MANAGEMENT ACCTG
BUSIIBO PRIN FINANCIAL MGT
BUSIIB6 INVESTMENTS
BUSII9O ADMIN POLICY
BUSI 200 M STATS FOR ACCOUNTANTS
BUSI 2408 FINANCIAL REPORTING II
BUSI 244A TAXATION
CHEM (CHEMISTRY)
CHEM 021 GEN DESCRIP CHEM II
CHEM 021 L QUANT CHEM LAB II
CHEM 051 INTRO INORG CHEM
CHEM 062 INTRO ORG CHEM II
CHEM 062 L LAB ORGANIC CHEM
CHEM 130 INTRO TO BIOL CHEM
CHEMI7OL SYNTH CHEM LAB I
CHEM 171 L SYNTH CHEM LAB II
CLAS (CLASSICS)
CLAS 077 MYTH IN GREEK LIT
COMM (COMMUNICATION STUDIES)
COMM 013 PUBLIC SPEAKING
COMM 022 INTRO INTERPER COMM
COMM 024 GENDER COMMUNICAT
COMM 034 FILM/VIDEO PROD
COMM 041 MEDIA CRITICISM
COMM 060 INTRO/PERF OF LIT
Chick-Fil-A Open Until 10
For Late-Night Snacking
STAFF REPORT
There’s good news for students who
want to actually eat when they’re hungry
not just when Lenoir Dining Hall’s
hours allow them to.
Students who are up late and on campus
can now eat at Chick-Fil-A for a 10 p.m.
snack.
Chick-Fil-A is now open until 10 p.m.
Monday through Thursday.
Chick-FH-A is the only fast-food option
open in Lenoir until 10 p.m. Pizza Hut, the
Firehouse Grill, the Sub Connection,
TCBY and the Cutting Board are open
until 7:30 p.m. on weeknights.
The hours were extended to serve stu
dents who have late classes and might not
have been able to eat during the earlier
hours, said Terry Rice, service manager of
Lenoir.
“We wanted to be able to accommodate
students who had late classes and may not
make it here before closing,” she said.
Rice said the hours had also been ex
tended to eliminate the rush of students
STADIUM
FROM PAGE 1
and North Carolina State have built new
footballfacilities,”Swoffordsaid. “Weare
not up to the standards of our colleagues in
the league.”
The $34 million funding for the renova
tions will come from private donations, the
Educational Foundation and revenue from
the additional general admission seats,
Swofford said.
Bruce Runburg, associate vice chancel
lor for facility management, said the archi
tect for the project would be selected within
the next two weeks.
“The ideas to do this have been around
for 10 to 15 years, but only in the past
several months has theplan been renewed,”
Runburg said.
Gordon Rutherford, director of facility
Campus Calendar
THURSDAY
2:30 p.m. Condensed Matter Seminar, 247
Phillips.
3:30 p.m. Particle Theory Seminar, 2SB Phillips.
Job Search Strategies for Disabled Students
workshop will be held in 210 Hanes Hall. Sponsored
byUCS.
Interviewing Skills workshop will be held in 209
Hanes Hall. Sponsored by UCS.
tip.m. Proposition 187 interest meeting, second
floor lounge of the Student Union.
7 p.m. Green Corps presentation open to all
students will be held in 209 Hanes Hall. Sponsored
byUCS.
International Food Tasting will be held in the
Great Hall.
9p.m. LaCasaEspanola vaatener Chari emosal
segundo piso de Carmichael dorm.
COMM 075 ENVIRO ADVOCACY
COMM 080 CULTURAL DIVERSITY
COMM 120INTERPERS COMM
COMP (COMPUTER SCIENCE)
COMP 004 COMP: PWR TOOLS/MIND
COMP 014 INTRO PROGRAMMING
DRAM (DRAMATIC ART)
DRAM 015 ELEMENTS OF DRAMA
DRAM 016 ELEMENTS OP THEATRE
DRAM 020 PLAY ANALYSIS
DRAM 035 ACTING/NON-MAJORS
DRAM 056 MVMT FOR THE ACTOR
DRAM 060 STAGECRAFT
ECON (ECONOMICS)
ECON 010 ECON: INTRO
ECON 070 ECONOMIC STATISTICS
ECON 100 APPLIED MICRO
ECON 101 MICRO THEORY
ECON 130 MACRO THRY & POLICY
ECON 132 IN TH/MONEY INC EMP
ECON 145 PUB POL TOWARD BUS
ECON 161 INTERNATIONAL ECON
ECON 193 HIST-LABOR MOVEMENT
EDCI (EDUCATION CURRICULUM AND WSTRUCTION)
EDCII2O EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUC
EDCI 200 INTRO TO CURRICULUM
EDFO (EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATIONS)
EDFO 101 PSYC CHILDHD & ADOL
EDFOI2O SOC FOUND AM EDUC
EDFO 220 PHIL MOD EDUC
EDFO 280 STATISTICS II
EDSP (EDUCATION, SPECIALIZED PROFESSDNAL PROCRAMS)
EDSP 201 THEO OF COUNSELING
EDSP 203 PRE-PRACT IN COUNS
EDSP 207 INTERN SCH CO/CONS
EDSP 209 ISSUES/ORG GUD SERV
EDSP 224 PRNT/FMLY HNDCP CHD
EDSP 228 EXTERN SCHL PSYCH
EDSP 322 SEM IN LRNG DISABS
EDSP 345 PROBS IN SPEC EDUC
EDUC (EDUCATION)
EDUC 004 ART FOR ELEM TCHERS
EDUC 041 EDUC IN AM SOCIETY
EDUC 069 TEACH SKILLS LAB
EDUC 096 TEACHING INTERNSHIP
EDUC 153 CONT RDNG & WRTNG
ENGL (ENGLISH)
ENGL 010 BASIC WRITING
ENGL 011 ENG COMP & RHETORIC
ENGL 012 ENG COMP & RHETORIC
ENGL 020 ENG LIT/MID AGE/18C
ENGL 025 INTRO TO POETRY
ENGL 058 SHAKESPEARE
ENGL 081 AMER LIT 1865-1930
ENGL 085 AFRO-AM UT FR 1950
ENGL 088 SOUTHERN AM LIT
ENGL 095 ENG-AM DRAM 20 CENT
ENGL 187 FOLKLORE IN SOUTH
ENGL 188 SOUTHERN-AMER LIT
ENGL 195 ENG/AMER DRAMA 20C
FOLK (FOLKLORE)
FOLK 187 FOLKLORE IN SOUTH
FREN (FRENCH)
FREN 002 ELEMENTARY FRENCH
FREN 003 INTERMEDIATE FRENCH
FREN 102 X ELEM FRE/GRAD/STU
GEOG (GEOGRAPHY)
GEOG 010 PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
GEOG 011 WEATHER AND CLIMATE
GEOG 020 WORLD REGIONS
GEOG 030 3RD WORLD ISSUES
GEOG 154 HIST GEOG OF THE US
GEOL (GEOLOGY)
GEOL 016 EVOLUTION OF LIFE
GEOL 016 L EVOL LIFE LAB
GERM (GERMAN)
GERM 002 ELEMENTARY GERMAN
GERM 004 INTERMEDIATE GERMAN
HIST (HISTORY)
H|ST 011 HIST OF WES CIV I
HIST 012 HIST OF WES CIV II
HIST 018 CONT WLD SINCE 1945
HIST 021 AM HIST TO 1865
HIST 022 AM HIST SINCE 1865
HIST 033 TRADITIONAL E ASIA
NOTE: ALSO OFFERED, BUT NOT ALL LISTED ARE:
a) Undergraduate and graduate courses of independent studies, special readings,
seminiars, internships, honors, practicums, research, thesis, and dissertation;*
b) courses for graduate students only;
c) courses in Health Affairs schools;
and) short courses, Summer School Abroad, and courses for special groups.
who came in before closing.
Business during the extended hours is
slowly building, she said. If it continues to
be promising, Carolina Dining Services
might consider extending the hours of the
other services.
“If sales start to boom, we’ll think about
opening the other ones,” Rice said.
Alicia Hall, a freshman from Charlotte
majoring in business, said she thought the
extended hours were a good idea.
“It’s really good if you need a late-night
snack, or if you’re at die library late study
ing,” Hall said.
Brandi Smith, a sophomore from
Goldsboro majoring in nursing, said the
extended hours were helpful because she
had meetings and classes at night.
“I have meetings late at night,” Smith
said. “We were going to have to eat at the
Student Union, but this was open.”
She said thehours were suited to late
diners.
“The others close earlier, and most of
the time I’m hungry around 7:30.”
planning and design, said that the renova
tions were still being planned and that they
might begin in the winter of 1995.
“All of this is still very tentative,”
Rutherford said. “At this point, we would
plan to start the restroom renovations and
the concession stand renovations after the
1995 football season and the major im
provements after the 1996 football sea
son.” “We don’t want to damage the aes
thetics and build seats that we can’t fill,"
Swoffordsaid. “Wewanttocontinuekeep
ing Kenan Stadium as one of the best.
“I truly believe that Kenan is one of the
most beautiful stadium facilities in the coun
try,” he said. “We want to keep it modem,
but we want to keep it beautifiil as well.”
Swofford said the plan had to be ap
proved by the UNC Board of Trustees, the
UNC-system Board of Governors and the
N.C. General Assembly.
For the Record
In the Feb. 15 edition of The Daily Tar
Heel, Town Council Nixes Funding for Park
ing Deck's Cave Paintings' incorrectly re
ported that the Chapel Hill Town Council did
not approve a $5,000 allocation to paint the
walls of the Rosemary Street Parking Deck
downtown.
The town council did approve full funding
of the project at Monday night’s meeting
despite a recommendation from Chapel Hill
Town Manager Cal Horton not to approve
the project
The DTH regrets the error. ->
HIST 052 HISTORY OF GREECE
HIST 0928 RELIGION IN AMERICA
HIST 112 THE RENAISSANCE
HIST 150 U S HIST SINCE 1932
INLS (INFORMATION 8 ÜBRARY SCIENCE)
INLS 110 SELECTED TOPICS
INLS 131 MNGT OF INFO AGEN
INLS 180 COMMUNICATION PROCESSES
INLS 299 FIELD EXPERIENCE
INLS 300 STUDY IN ILS
INTS (INTERNATIONAL STUDIES)
INTS 80 SOCIAL THY 8 CULT DIVERSITY
ITAL (ITALIAN)
ITAL 002 ELEMENTARY ITAUAN
ITAL 041 ITAL REN LIT TRANS
JOMC (JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION)
JOMC 056 FEATURE WRITING
JOMC 057 NEWS EDITING
JOMC 085 GRAPHIC DESIGN
JOMC 146 INTL COMM 8 COMP JOUR
JOMC 164 INTRO MASS COMM UW
JOMC 171 ADVERT COPY 8 COMMU
JOMC 174 SPORTS MKTG 8 ADV
JOMC 264 MASS COMM UW ETH
UTN (UTIN)
UTN 002 ELEMENTARY UTIN
UTN 003 INTERMEDIATE UTIN
UNG (LINGUISTICS)
LING 030 INTRO TO UNG
LSRA (LEISURE STUDESIRECREAIION AOMNSTRATION)
LSRA 010 INTRO LEISURE SERV
LSRA 181 SUPFLDTRG IN RECR
LSRA 281 INTRNSHP RECR ADMIN
MASC (MARINE SCIENCES)
MASC 138 ENVR PROC COST ZONE
MASC 141 SPEC PROB MAR BIOL
MATH (MATHEMATICS)
MATH 010 ALGEBRA
MATH 018 SELECTED TOP/MATH
MATH 022 CALCULUS BUS/SS
MATH 030 TRIG/ANAL GEOMETRY
MATH 031 CALC FUNC ONE VAR I
MATH 032 CAL FUNC ONE VAR II
MATH 083 LIN/ALGDIFFEQ
MATH 122 ADVANCED CALCLUSII
MATH 131 EUCL 8 NONEUCL GEOM
MATH 133 ELEM THRY NUMBERS
MUSC (MUSIC)
MUSC 001A PIANO
MUSC 002 VOICE
MUSC 021 FUND OF MUSIC I
MUSC 042 MUSIC MASTERPIECES
MUSC 087 THEATRE MUSIC
PHIL (PHILOSOPHY)
PHIL 020 INTRO: MAIN PROBS
PHIL 021 INTRO SYMBOL LOGIC
PHIL 022 INTRODUCTION ETHICS
PHIL 034 BIOETHICS
PHIL 037 SOC ETHICS POLTHOT
PHIL 041 MORALITY AND UW
PHIL 046 PHIL ISSU/FEMINISM
PHIL 060 HIST PHIL KANT PRES
PHYA (PHYSICAL EDUCATION, REOURED ACTIVmES)
PHYA 011 AEROBIC DANCE
PHYA 013 GOLF
PHYA 020 RACQUETBALL
PHYA 027 BEGINNING SWIMMING
PHYA 029 BEGINNING TENNIS
PHYA 033 WEIGHT TRAINING
PHYE (PHYS ED, EXER 8 SPT MED)
PHYE 041 PERSONAL HEALTH
PHYE 59 FITNESS MGT.
PHYE 74 HEALTH 8 P.E. IN ELEM SCHL
PHYE 076 PHYSIOLOGY
PHYE 077 HIST-PRIN PHYE
PHYE 081 SPORT PSYCH/SOC
PHYE 088 EMERGENCY CARE
PHYE 099 ISSUES IN P.E.
PHYS (PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY)
PHYS 025 GENERAL PHYSICS
PHYS 025 L GENERAL PHYSICS UB
PHYS 027 ELECTROMAG 8 OPTICS
PHYS 125 PHYS H/SCH TEACHERS
PUN (CITY 8 REGIONAL PLANNING)
PUN 067 ETH PUB POL DM
uty? Saily ®ar Hppl
PLAN 131 QUANT METHODS
POU (POLITICAL SCIENCE)
POLI 041 INTRO TO GOVT IN US
POLI 052 INTRO FOREIGN GOVT
POLI 055 SOVIET/POST-SOV POL
POLI 061 MAJ ISS POL THEORY
POLI 062 AM POL THEORY
POLI 067 FEMINISM POL THEORY
POLI 074 POL FEASIBILITY
POLI 086 INTERN REL WRLD POL
POLI 087 LAT AM/U S WRLD POL
P0L1144 AMER FOREIGN POLICY
POU 164 FEMINISM 8 POLITICAL THY
PORT (PORTUGUESE)
PORT 002 ELEMENTARY PORT
PSYC (PSYCHOLOGY)
PSYC 010 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY
PSYC 022 LEARNING
PSYC 024 CHILD DEVELOPMENT
PSYC 028 PERSONALITY
PSYC 030 STAT PRIN PSYC RES
PSYC 050 LAB RESEARCH/PSYC
PSYC 080 BEHAVIOR DISORDERS
PSYC 140 ADVANCED PERSONAL
PSYC 141 PSYC ADULTHOOD AGE
PUPA (PUBLIC POLICY ANALYSIS)
PUPA 067 ETH PUB POL DM
PUPA 074 Pa FEASIBILITY
PWAD (PEACE, WAR 8 DEFENSE)
PWAD 086 INTERN REL WRLD Pa
PWAD 087 UT AM/U S WRLD POL
PWAD 143 CONFLICT AND BARGAINING
PWAD 144 AMER FOREIGN POLICY
RELI (REUGIOUS STUDIES)
RELI 021 INTRO/OLD TEST LIT
RELI 029 RELIGION IN AMERICA
RELI 031 INTRO REL 8 CULTURE
RELI 059 BIRTH OF CHRSTNY
RUSS (RUSSIAN)
RUSS 3-4 INTENS INTERMED RUS
SOCI (SOCIOLOGY)
SOCI 010 AMERICAN SOCIETY
SOCI 011 HUMAN SOCIETIES
SOCI 012 SOCIAL INTERACTION
SOCI 015 REG SOC OF SOUTH
SOCI 020 SOCIAL PROBLEMS
SOCI 022 BLK-WHT REL IN US
SOCI 023 CRIME AND DEUN
SOCI 024 SEX 8 GEN IN SOC
SOCI 030 FAM AND SOC
SOCI 031 SOC REL IN WORKPUC
SOCI 050 SOCia THEORY
SOCI 08C CULTURAL DIVERSITY
SOCIIII SOC MVMTS/COL BEH
50C1127 THE ÜBOR FORCE
50C1143 CONFLICT/BARGAINING
SOWO (SOCIAL WORK)
SOWO 221 SOC WORK PRCTII
SOWO 222 SOC WORK PRCT 111
SOWO 223 SOC WORK PRCT IV
SOWO 233 FAMILY STRESS
SOWO 276 AFR AMER WOM HLT IS
SOWO 382 CUN ASSESS INSTRMTS
SPAN (SPANISH)
SPAN 002 ELEMENTARY SPANISH
SPAN 003 INTERMEDIATE SPAN
SPAN 004 INTERMEDIATE SPAN
SPAN 102 X ELEM SPAN/GRAD STU
STAT (STATISTICS)
STAT 011 BA CPT STAT/DA ANAL
STAT 023 PROB-STAT FOR BUSI
WMST (WOMENS STUDIES)
WMST 024 SEX 8 GEN IN SOC
WMST 046 PHIL ISSU/FEMINISM
WMST 056 GENDER COMMUNICAT
WMST 064 WOMEN VISUAL ARTS I
WMST 067 FEMINISM POL THEORY
WMST 164 FEMINISM AND POL THEORY