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2 Monday, March 18,1996 UNC Kicks Off Commiuiity Service Week ■ Students can learn about serving Chapel Hill at an expo in the Great Hall today. BY NATALIE NEIMAN STAFF WRITER In addition to learning the mysteries of math and spelling at Glenwood Elemen tary school, nine-year-old Ashley Craig has had a lesson or two in Macarena, a Latin-American song and dance. However, she didn’t have to travel to Latin America to learn the steps she learned them in Chapel Hill while taking Maybe our students are smarter, or maybe AVERAGE FINAL GMAT SCORES they’re just better prepared. The Princeton Review is the nation’s fastest growing I GMAT course. And for good reason. WM 55Q We’re the course with: • insighdul, aggressive techniques • rigorously trained instructors fl • free extra-help ■ 45Q • four practice tests • up-to-the minute research TOE KAPLAN NO See for yourself. PRINCETON COURSE A Princeton Review instructor who took REVIEW the March GMAT last Saturday will report on the test at a free GMAT Preview, __________ Tuesday, March 19,7:30pm-9:oopm, BUSINESS at our office <1829 E. Franklin Street, _ ___ _ _ _ Building 600, Chapel Hill. OIfHUULo Call today to reserve a space! PREFER HIGHER GMAT SCORES <9l® 967-7209 'jam TT-TF The Princeton Review is not affiliated JL X 1 Wl-J with Princeton University or ETS. The Princeton Review and Kaplan scores are |ll J | f' I ? \ T based on Roper Starch and Price Waterhouse | IX, I 1 y F j I studies, respectively. Score improvement rounded to nearest actual score. National X T average courtesy of GMAC. |\ |\ V | yy info.chapelhill@review.com http://www.review.com If You Have the Vision, Oracle Will Supply the View. Introducing the most comprehensive Software Sales Consultant Trainee Program the IT world has ever known. If you're challenged by the thrill of providing innovative technology and you enjoy working directly with clients solving business problems, join Oracle! Our Sales Consultant Trainee Program is a comprehensive indoctrination into the business dynamics of the Information Age. We’ll sharpen your technical, presentation, and management skills. You will work with the very Oracle solutions that are renowned for changing the way human knowledge is gathered, stored, retrieved, and utilized. In six short months, you’ll have the technological edge and the professional clout to drive the future of business as well as advance your career goals. With record sales of $3 billion and nearly 50% growth in the last year alone, your opportunities to ascend at Oracle will be virtually limitless. Qualifications for our Trainee Program include a BA/BS, strong communication skills, the desire to travel, experience in RDBMS, Tools and/or CASE Applications, and a solid knowledge of at least one operating system. Visit us at the Job Fair on Wednesday, March 20, from 11:00 am to 3:30 pm, in the Great Hall of the Student Union. If you can’t attend, send your resume today to: Oracle Corporation, 500 Oracle Parkway, Box 659314, Redwood Shores, CA 94065. Or e-mail, in ASCII text, to: presales@us.oracle.com. FAX to: (415) 413-3648. We offer a generous compensation and benefits program, including an aggressive performance-driven bonus plan. Equal talent always receives equal opportunity.-Visit our Web site at: http://www.oracle.com. part in the Big Buddy program, one of UNC’s many community service projects. The second-annual Community Service Week, which kicks off today, will give students the opportunity to learn more about such service programs in the com munity and on campus, said founder and organizer, Rachael Landau. Jessica Rios, Ashley’s big buddy and co-chairwoman of the that program, said she thought participating in community service projects allowed students to help others while gaining valuable skills. “The most fun thing for me with kids is exposing them to cultural diversity because a lot of them haven’t been exposed to it,” said Rios, who is also president of the ORACLE Enabling the Information Age UNIVERSITY Carolina Hispanic Association. Students interested in volunteering in the community can talk to representatives from various organizations at the Service Showcase from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. today from in the Great Hall. “This program allows students, faculty and community members to come in to find out what these service organizations do, what they are and what we, the students can do for them, ’’ Landau said. An appreciation party for community service workers will take place Tuesday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Chapel Hill Senior Center. Students organizing Com munity Service Week will provide child care while area workers from more than 100 service organizations network and re lax, Landau said. Students who can’t commit time to lo cal organizations can help Chapel Hill in other ways. From now until Thursday, students can donate canned or boxed food in the Pit from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. For each can or box donated, students will receive a stamp. Students can use thestamps to bid on merchandise donated from 27 local businesses during the Canned Food Drive Auction at 6 p.m. Thursday in 100 Hamilton Hall. The food will goto Friends of the Department of Social Services, which distributes food to families in crisis. “Last year, we had so much food do nated that they said they were going to have to find another room to put it in because it wasn't going to fit in their pan try,” Landau said. Students can sign up for Into the Streets, a program to clean up the campus that will take place Sunday. UNC was ranked ninth in Mother Jones’ rating of activist college campuses last fall. The magazine ranked UNC fourth the previous year. Six service oriented groups helped organize the event: N.C. Hillel, Sigma Alpha lota, Phi Sigma Pi, the Student Affairs Committee, Senior Corps and Campus Crusade for Christ. MONEY FOR COLLEGE Hundreds & Thousands of Grants & Scholarships Available to All Students Immediate . jib Qualification No Repayments ] EVER - Call 1-800-585-BAID : $5 off : I Good on any tanning package of 10 I or more visits with this coupon. Good until March 31,1996 I I TANNERY I Open ‘Til Midnite • 7 Days a Week I 169 E. Franklin Street • Near the Post Office V 929-5409 J Wednesday, March 20,1996 11:00-3:00 Great Hall, Student Union DISCUSSCURRENT JOB OPENINQS WITH: • AEROTEC, INC. • ASTRA MERCK, INC. • AT & T UNIVERSAL CARD SERVICES • ATCOM • AVANT! CORPORATION • BELLSOUTH ADVERTISING/PUBLISHING • BLACK AND DECKER • BLETHEN STAFFING SERVICES • CADENCE DESIGN SYSTEMS • CASTNER KNOTT • CIRCUIT CITY STORES • CROWN HONDA/VOLVO • DANKA INDUSTRIES • DURACELL USA • ECKERD FAMILY YOUTH ALTERNATIVES • ENTERPRISE RENT-A-CAR • FERGUSON ENTERPRISES • GAYFERS/J.B. WHITE • HENDRICK AUTOMOTIVE GROUP • HOLIDAY INN WORLDWIDE • INFONAUTICS • INTERNATIONAL JENSEN • METLIFE INSURANCE CO. • KELLY SERVICES • LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF VIRGINIA • MANOR HEALTH CARE • NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE • NBC BANK FSB • ORACLE • PEACE CORPS • PHOENIX HOME LIFE • PIRG • PRIMERICA FINANCIAL SERVICES • PRUDENTIAL PREFERRED FINANCIAL SERVICES • SENTEL CORP. • SHORE-VARRONE, INC. • SOUTHERN BAG CORPORATION • STRYKER • SYNECTICS, INC. • TARGET • THREE SPRINGS OF NC • UNC-CENTER FOR PUBLIC TV • UNIFI, INC. • WALLACE • WENDOVER FUNDING • WESTERN AUTO Business Dress Recommended! BRING RESUMES! Sfwnsored by UNIVERSITY CAREER SERVICES Division of Student Affairs • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill SPANGLER FROM PAGE 1 derides to wait until August to announce his future plans, the next board chair will have to job of choosing a selection commit tee. The BOG sources on the board said that Spangler’s decision to waituntilafterNeill’s tenure to announce his plans was a slap in the face to Neill. One source said, “There has been some talk about the fact that we need to formal ize a process. If Mr. Spangler waits until after Mr. Neill is gone, somebody else and God only knows who that could be— will be able to make that decision.” One source said partisan politics were playing themselves out in the current situ ation. As it stands, the majority of the board members are registered Democrats. Board members are appointed by the General Assembly. During the last ses sion, which was marked with a transfer of power from the left to the right in the House of Representatives, the legislature AMOROUS FROM PAGE 1 Williams resigned after UNC-CH Chan cellor Michael Hooker moved to begin dismissal proceedings to remove the ten ured professor. Allegations of instructors eliciting sex from students at the N.C. School of the Arts in Winston Salem also sparked criticism and outrage from state legislators and parents, prompting the UNC-system governing board to address the issue. BOG member Lois Britt said the new policy would remove any ambiguity from the system’s policy on relationships. “The benefit of the new policy is that it is not vague,” she said. “This specifically spells out interest for students under 18 as well as for faculty and supervisors.” Last summer, board members created a subcommittee to study amorous relations between students and employees at con stituent institutions and draft a system wide policy concerning the issue. The sub committee used guidelines previously adopted at three system schools, including UNC-CH,N.C. StateUniversityandUNC- Charlotte, as well as guidelines from peer systems in writing the system-wide policy. “We acknowledge that even with re spect to consensual relationships not in volving special responsibility or minors, Campus Calendar MONDAY 11 a.m. CAROLINA TRACK AND FIELD Bake sale will be held in the Pit today until 2 p.m. Please come out and support. 2 p.m. DISSERTATION SUPPORT GROUP: Handle the problems that block progress with spe cific strategies. Univeisity Counseling Center inNash Hall, 962-2175. Registration required. 3:15 p.m. CAREER CLINIC: Develop an ac tion plan for choosing a major or a career. University Counseling Center in Nash Hall. 3:30p.m. UNIVERSITY CAREER SERVICES will sponsor Job Hunt 101A: Exploring Your Op tions (for seniors/graduate students). This covers Spring Job Fair for Seniors & Graduate Students Qraduating this Spring or Summer Slip Daily Sar Hppl elected seven new Republican members to the board. One source said if the current conserva tive trend continues the board would have a Republican majority by 1997. BOG sources said a continued conservative swing on the board would influence the choices that a selection committee would come up with. “It’s terrible that party politics has to play into this when so many things are at stake. But that’s life on a state board. It’s a necessary part of an operation like this,” one source said. While some members on the board con firmed reports of pressure being levied on Spangler, other members on the board said they were not as confident about the infor mation being circulated. “It was apparently a whole lot about nothing, or it was nothing,” said BOG member Edward Broadwell. “I think that Spangler loves the University and will do the right thing.” James Lewis contributed to this story. prospectively there may be serious hazards —for the student, for the employee and for the institution when employees and students enter into such amorous relation ships,” the report states. The report defines amorous relations as any relationship that exists when, without the benefit of marriage, two people have sexual relations or engage in a romantic courtship that has not necessarily been consummated sexually. The new policy explicitly prohibits any UNC system employee from evaluating or supervising a student with whom he or she has an amorous relationship or to which he or she is related through blood or marriage. BOG member Maxine O’Kelley said she was pleased to see the uniform policy in place. “Once you have a uniform or basic policy in place you can give cam puses that option to make it stronger if that’s what they think they want.” In order to regulate more closely the N.C. School of the Arts, which has a high school division, the guidelines also pro hibit employees engaging in sexual activi ties with any student who is under 18 years of age. Violation of the new policy is subject to disriplinaty action and procedures pre scribed by each of the 16 schools. Robyn Tomlin Hackley contributed to this story. how to start from scratch in deciding which career field is best for you in 306 Hanes Hall. 6:30 p.m. CAROLINA S.A.F.E. - mandatory full body meeting in Union 213. 7 p.m. HEKIMA, the reading circle that dis cusses literature written by African-Americans, will meet today m the Sonja H. Stone Black Cultural Center We will discuss “Let the Dead Bury Their Dead" by Randall Kenan. From the book, we will only read the short stories “What Are Days" and “Let the Dead Bury Their Dead.” 8:30p.m. DAUGHTEROFBILLY GRAHAM, Anne Graham Lotz, will be speaking in 1 OOHamilton Hall. All are welcome. Sponsored by FCA.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 18, 1996, edition 1
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