Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 22, 1996, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 Thursday, February 22,1996 REVIEW FROM PAGE 1 of Carroll Hall. “The first thing I saw were Carolina Reviews stuffed in all the desks,” Cunningham said. “There was a throng (seven or eight people) in the back right comer of the room.” Cunningham said a “raging" debate was in progress between Allen, Gamer and the others. Cunningham said he identified two TEP members Reza Ardalan, a junior from Winston-Salem, and Richard Fremont, a senior from New York among the people. Ardalan and Fremont confirmed they were in the room but had no further com ment Wednesday night. Cunningham said he was in 106 Carroll Hall for five minutes. (Cunningham said he knew about the Review’s content because he had run into Nelson’s campaign manager Christina Reynolds and campaign worker Corye Barbourearlierin the School ofLaw, where Cunningham was distributing food service leaflets. Reynolds and Barber had a copy of theßeviewthathelookedat, Cunningham said.) Men said he and Gamer left to get Gamer’s car from a parking lot near Davis Library. Take Kaplan and get a higher score... Classes for June exams begin soon Space is limited! For more information call 1-800-KAP-TEST KAPLAN E-mail: infoekaplan.com America Online: keyword “Kaplan" Internet home page: http://www.kaplan.com •Offer limited to selected locations and test dates. Restrictions apply. Call for details. The Hottest Dance Club in Chapel Hill The Hottest Dance Club in Chapel Hill • The Hottest Dance Club in Chapel Hill The Hottest Dance Club in Chapel Hill FRIDAY $1 Draft $1. H House Shots No Cover before 11pm So come to GOTHAM ‘cause the City Never Sleeps! $2 Cover with Student ID after 11 pm -lii. R HnttßSt Danne Cll| h in Chapel Hill The Hottest Dance Club in Chapel Hiil • The Hottest Dance Club in Chapel Hill "Ss 1 70 I s fi2 | '44 'O3 | S/|4 1 W total's Stifeit Mvatlaie Cart Meets li% Iff Water Getawaifs. If you want to get away from it all this winter, Amtrak' is the way to go. Especially when you can save 15% off awesome getaways with the Student Advantage Card. Call 1-800-96-AMTRAK to get your card. And, take your pick of cool places, hot spots and hundreds of other colorful vacation destinations designed to take your mind off the winter blues. Pick your destination now and call your travel agent or Amtrak for reservations at 1-800-USA-RAIL. Winter getaway seats are limited so call today while the getting’s good. *Atl prictl are one wav, based on round-trip coach tare withls% Student Advantage Card discount. Fares are based on availability and are subiect to chanqe without notice Seats are limited Additional charge lor First Class or other accommodations. Other restrictions may apply. After he was finished distributing leaf lets, Cunningham said he left Carroll through the front doors and did not pass through 106 Carroll Hall. He said he did not see anyone when he left. More than 1,500 copies of the issue were found the following morning in the Student Union office of Student Attorney General George Oliver. Five thousand copies of the issue were originally printed, but only about 1,500 were distributed, Men said. The copies that were found in Oliver’s office are now in Men and Gamer’s possession. Men said he did not distribute all of the original 5,000 copies because he had hoped to dis tribute them in the case of a run-off. Gamer said the copies she bad placed in 100 Hamilton Hall, 209 Manning Hall, 106 Carroll Hall and other large class rooms around campus were removed. Nelson said Thursday he did not know who stole the copies. Matt Mesmer, president ofTEP, denied the fraternity’s involvement with the inci dent. “TEP had nothing to do with anything that happened with the Carolina Review, ” Mesmer said. “I know of no individual who had anything to do with the Carolina Review being stolen. I have not seen any concrete proof to back that up.” • - A, o 306 W. Franklin St (facing W. Rosemary) 21 ft over w/Proper ID • For more info call 967-2852 Prlvatß Parties Auailahln TELECOMMUNICATIONS FROM PAGE 1 their suit last Thursday in federal court, but a significant part of the ban stands, leaving the Internet subject to standards similar to those used for prime-time television. According to the act, anyone posting materials on the Internet that are deemed “offensive as measured by contemporary community standards” can be fined up to $250,000 and sentenced to as many as two years in prison. Proponents of the act said the clause Black History Month Spotlight Percy La von Julian Percy Lavon Julian (1899-1975) received a BA. degree from De Pauw University in Greencastie, Ind. in 1920, a M.A. degree from Harvard University in 1923 and his Ph.D. degree from die University of Vienna, Austria in 1931. Julian became associate professor of chemistry at Howard University in 1927 and was a research fellow in organic chemistry at Campus Calendar THURSDAY 11 .m. SUMMER STUDY ABROAD informa tion fair in the Pit until 2:30 p.m. 12 p.m. STORYING SENTIMENTS: Constitut ing Indonesian Womanhood in Romance Novel Authors & Audiences with Carla Jones in UCIS conference room at 223 E. Franklin St. 6:30 p.m. CUAB presents “Farmdli” in Union k'/flis ™ r affects^ Lyoiw If you are one of the Graduate Students randomly selected to receive a health insurance survey, PLEASE respond & return It in the provided envelope. It was not possible to survey everyone, so your response is very important for providing better insurance coverage & accessibility. Health Insurance! Thlssurveylssupportedby funds form GPSF, the Graduate School, & the Student Government SATURDAY $2 240 z. Gorilla Draft $2 Kamikazis No Cover before 11pm Open‘til 3AM! NEWS was added to the act because anyone log ging on to the Internet—including minors —would have access to the offensive ma terials. The clause attempts to protect chil dren from on-line pornography and ob scenity. To opponents of the act, the indecency provision is like a blind spot, creating a dangerous potential for highway accidents. Opponents claim the language is vague and overly broad because it lacks defini tions of what constitutes “obscene” and “indecent” materials. Proponents said the ban ensures Internet DePauw from 1932 to 1936. In 1954, he founded Julian Laboratories, Inc., through which he devel oped synthetic cortisone. In 1961 Julian sold the Chicago plant to Smith, Kline & French, remaining as president, and he sold die Guatemala plant to Upjohn Company. In 1964 he founded Julian Re search Institute. Julian contributed many scholarly papers to journals and registered 105 patents. Auditorium. Also showing at 9 p.m. Free! 7 p.m. JEFF HUTCHINSON, associate pastor at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Durham, will closeafour-partserieson Malachi in Union 208-209. UNIVERSITY CAREER SERVICES will spon sor PIRG presentation in2lo Hanes Hall. Open to all interested students. SEAC general interest meeting in Union 205. Graduate Students! $2 Cover with Student ID after 11pm users the right to pursue life, liberty and happiness without being subjected to ques tionable materials. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., have presented a bill to the Senate to repeal the CDA. Leahy saidthenewactloweredthelevel of permissible on-line communication to that of a kindergartener. He said literary quotes from books such as “Catcher in the Rye” would be banned from the Internet. Leahy argued that the new law created a double standard for print and broadcast media. “Some people consider the Victoria’s Secret catalogue indecent,” he said. “You could put them in your local newspaper, but you cannot put it on-line.” On-line discussions about birth control and AIDS prevention would also be banned. The act states that anyone using the Internet to send communications “in a manner available to a person under 18 years of age ... that, in context depicts or describes ... sexual or excretory activities or organs” shall be fined, imprisoned or both. In addition to fighting the CDA, the petition filed by the ACLU seeks to repeal a provision that would make it illegal to distribute information about abortions on line. On the day the bill was signed, the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League filed suit in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn seeking a re straining order against the abortion provi sion. The judge denied the request after getting assurance from the U.S. Justice Department that the government would not prosecute violators. M TANNING GOOD QQ DAYS QQ DOLLARS i SESSIONS FOR 99 Exp. 3/31/96 J Students only, ID required | New Itot Bulbs! '• AI gra Open 7 Days A Week! I V tywi 942-7177 JL Tannln 9 * Massa 9 es • Nails • Waxing #__ • „ • n q 3 miles from campus, 15-501 S. & ___ qW Smith Levej_Road_at_Star Point i '■SB a. am mi The Hottest Dance Club in Chapel Hill Haircuts 1/2 Price. Bring in this ad and get a Haircut at 1/2 Price. Adult Shampoo/Cut Reg. *lO Now *5.00 Adult Shampoo/Cut/Blowdry Style Reg. *ls Now *7.50 Includes conditioning rinse. No extra charge for long hair. No appointments. Open 7 days. West Franklin Street 306 West Franklin Street in Chapel Hill 929 - 9095 Hair c uttery A good haircut is a good haircut.™ VaUd at this salon only with this ad. Offer expires 4/6/96. No double discounts please. One ad per person. 028 fIMTRfI K SCJTN-1 Hath) alar Brel ACLU President Nadine Strossen said in a Monday interview that the “V-chip” legislation was unconstitutional. The act requires television manufacturers to equip new television sets with a computer chip that would allow users to block violent, sexually explicit or indecentprogramming. Again the debate lies with who defines “violent, sexually explicit or indecent.” The television industry may create its own voluntary ratings system, but the act re quires the Federal Communications Com mission to set those definitions if the televi sion industry doesn’t do so within a year. The act will also lessen diversity in the telecommunications industry, Strossen said. Media ownership rules have been relaxed, making it possible for companies such as AT&T to compete for business in local phone, cable TV and on-line services. But with deregulation comes the threat of media monopolies buying out the little guys and ultimately destroying the compe tition the act intended to create. Members oftheElectronicFrontierFoundation, one of the plaintiffs in the ACLU suit, attended a tally on Feb. 10 in Washington D.C. protesting restrictions on the Internet. One speaker at the rally was the editor of “The Ethical Spectacle,” Jonathon Wallace, who is also a plaintiff in the ACLU suit. He said the Internet was one of the last mediums for uncensored and unfil tered information. “Without freedom of speech, there are no issues,” Wallace said, adding that free speech is the cornerstone of all liberties. “Freedom of speech is oxygen,” he said. “Without it, there is nothing else.” Ask the IRS am or pm. Tax questions? Call TeleTax, toll-free, for recorded information on about 150 tax topics, 24 hours a day. 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