6 Tuesday, February 13,1996 SPECIAL THANKS to all of these area merchants who provided generous contributions. Wrthouttheir help Gram i* lowers' Mani Gras CMno Ntyhfc would not have been pssible. Antonio's Macaroni Grill Applebees MCA-Universal Records Blockbuster (South Square) Merle Norman Blockbuster Music (University Mall) Minata The Book Market Mlo's Pizza Burt's Bees Inc. Movies at Timberlyne Camelot Music Mrs. Fields Cameron's New York New York Capital Travel The Original Ornament Carolina Brewery Outback Steakhouse Carolina Sports Cards Panda Inn Carolina University Bookstore —, , Peirpont House Apartments Chapel Hill Florist Play It Again Sports Chick-fil-A Plaza Theaters Chili’s n VTjl mil ßam Book & Supply Circle Travel Red Hot & Blue The Club for Women Only § Reeds Jewelers The Commons • Tli'-’ Schubach The Cotton 801 l.• . ■\\ \p/jTOJ /L. ■' Spa Health Clubs Dance Design . ' Spencer Gifts Deck the Walls Spinnakers Fitness World ' ,rr """ Summit Hall Going Greek or.nvmeTow ra *aumomQrrr Sunshine Treasures Great American Cookie Company Swensen's Hair Plus T'Boli Harrison House Apartments 35 Chinese Restaurant lllini Towers Time Out The Intimate Bookshop Tyndall's Jersey Mike's The Video Bar Jewel Box Vis Art Video Knot Just Ties Wicked Burrito Lee's Chinese Zobra's The Loop THANK YOU! The Road To Better Food Service... The PROBLEMS The PLAN~ I The BENEFITS I ... i. The Food Services Advisory Task Force has _ *l* Long WQITIng 11PIGS recommended a comprehensive plan for / Faster moving lines improving campus food service. Some of the • Slow service , )mproved servjce & quQ | jty • to renovate ana expand: • Inadequate seating Lenoir / 30% MORE seating r i • Limited food options Student Union DOUBLE the number of • Negative environmental impact • Limited student control of Directors / Environmentally sound design • Dated, inefficient facilities , ' A Student Board of Directors Total Cost of Plan: $28.98 in Charge LESS Current Fee: SIO.OO f I . I Ii Increased Revenue: $ll.BO * IMw mOnuOtOfy IXI6OI plOH! Reapply 40% of Debt Coverage: $2.32 Utilize Loss Reserves: $4.55 YOU PAY ONLY: $0.31 Vote FOR Food Service Changes when you vote TODAY! STATE & NATIONAL CONNER FROM PAGE 1 The spending limit for student body president candidates is S4OO. There is a five percent grace, so candidates can claim no more than $420 expense. “(The clipping) is considered campaign material by definition of campaign mate rial,” Shuart said. “Therefore its value has to be evaluated according to the campaign materials definition.” Kevin Schwartz, general manager of The Daily Tar Heel, estimated the cost of printing 800 14-page color papers to be $lO5, Shuart said. She said she would call other printers to get estimates from them, and Conner would have to claim the least expensive estimate. Conner said he planned to claim the clippings on his expense report, but with no monetary value. If he does so, and Shuart thinks they should have value, Conner can appeal to the Elections Board. “I think it’s ridiculous that I be charged for a 14-page paper,” Conner said. “I shouldn’t even be charged for a fourth of a page ... Free market value is absolutely zero. Everywhere I go, DTHs are free.” The law school was a target because historically, law students turn out in large numbers for the elections, Conner said. “We knew they would just be recycled anyway, ” said Conner, who also made 67 copies of the platform at Kinko’s. “It’s not like anyone was going to read the extra copies. SUMMER CAMP COUNSELOR POSTIONS AVAILABLE YMCA Camp Cheerio is located atop the Blue Ridge Mountains near Roaring Gap, NC. Competitive salaries, room and board provided. Some ten week positions also available: Aquatics Director (WSI), Equestrian Director, Climbing Director, and Adventure Camp (wilderness tripping) Counselors. Girls camp: June 9-July 13 Boys camp: July 14-Aug 17 Visit our Camp Fair booth in Great Hall on Feb. 14th CAMP CHEERIO, PO BOX 6258 HIGH POINT, NC 27262 (800) 226-7496 http: / / users.aol.com/Brantßl /cchome.htm OPEN MEETINGS FROM PAGE 1 papers to join in the action, which will be filed in the Guilford County Superior Court, and will name Hooker, Sullivan and UNC system president C.D. Spangler as lead defendants. Hooker said he could not comment on the possibility of a lawsuit. Hooker met with NCP A Attorney Hugh Stevens and representatives of The Daily Tar Heel, The Chapel Hill News and The (Durham) Herald-Sun in January to dis cuss the request to open the Chancellor’s Committees on Athletics and Buildings and Grounds on a trial basis. Hooker said University Legal Counsel Susan Ehringhaus advised him that the Chancellor’s advisory committees were not subject to the provisions in the law, but were instead meetings ofprofessional staff. Stevens debated this point with Hooker in the meeting, saying that students held positions on several of the committees. But Hooker said students were a part of the professional climate at UNC. “Thepartici pation of students in the committee struc ture of the University is an integral part of the operation and the character of this institution,” Hooker stated in his letter. Martin said she did not understand how information discussed in the committees could be of such a delicate nature that public debate could affect the matters at hand. “If Congress can meet in open ses sion, then surely the Univeisity can.” IN THE NEWS Top stories from the state, nation and world Clinton, Holbrooke Named Nobel Peace Candidates OSLO, Norway President Clinton and his peace emissary for Bosnia, Richard Holbrooke, are among 103 people and organizations so farnominated forthe 1996 Nobel Peace Prize. Imprisoned Chinese dissident and hu man rights activist Wei Jingsheng has re ceived multiple nominations. In keeping with the prize committee’s tradition of secrecy, the non-voting secretary, Geir Lundestad, refused comment Monday. He would say that 82 individuals and 21 organizations had been nominated as of Monday, but proposals postmarked by the Jan. 31 nomination deadline were con tinuing to arrive in Oslo and still could be included. The Oslo-based Norwegian Nobel Committee never discloses the names of candidates, partly to protect those struggling against oppressive regimes. Jury Hears Ballistics Testimony in Jordan Trial LUMBERTON Michael Jordan’s father could have been killed with one of a million or more pistols, the agent who MASTER OF SCIENCE IN ACCOUNTANCY Cameron S ch o o 1 o f B u sin es s *ls U n i v ers it y o f N or t h C ar o 1i n a a t W iI m in gt o n Attention All College Graduates! * Earn a graduate degree that will prepare you for career op p o rtu n itie s in : Public Accounting Not-for-Profit Organizations Business Government * Class sizes are small and you can complete the program in ten to thirteen months. * Classes begin: August 22, 1996 for Accounting Undergraduates May 21, 1996 for Non-accounting Undergraduates * AACSB accredited For Ap p lica tio n s an il In fo r m ati o n Call: Pro lessor Joanne R uckncss (9 1 0) 395-3 7 76 O fficc (9 10) 395 -3 81 5 Fax Utyr Baihj alar Brrl examined the bullet from the dead man’s body testified Monday. Ron Marrs, a gun expert for the State Bureau of Investigation, was on the wit ness stand the second day in the trial of Daniel Andre Green, who is charged with the July 23,1993 slaying of James R. Jor dan. District Attorney Johnson Britt has said the ballistics evidence is helpful even if it is not conclusive. Testimony was delayed for 30 minutes in the morning because Green got into a fight with another inmate in a holding cell. Green hit another inmate and cut the inmate above the eye, said Maj. Mark Locklear of the Robeson County Sheriff’s Department. Green’s clothes were blood ied and he wanted to change before enter ing the courtroom, Locklear said. Helms and Faircloth Open E-Mail Accounts in D.C. HIGH POlNT—North Carolina’s two U.S. senators now can be reached via com puter. Both Sens. Jesse Helms and Lauch Faircloth recently added e-mail as one way constituents can communicate with them. Of the 14-member N. C. House delega tion, 10 have e-mail addresses. Peter Hans, communication director for Faircloth, said the senator’s office receives 200 to 300 e-mail messages a week. Mes sages from North Carolina receive written reply, but e-mail from outside the state goes unanswered, Hans said. Broughton said Helms ’ office is respond ing to e-mail messages electronically to acknowledgethetransmission. If the sender includes a mailing address, a written re sponse follows. FROM WIRE REPORTS

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