Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 4, 1996, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 Thursday, April 4,1996 Group Calls for Improved Safety Coordination ■ The Chancellor’s Task Force on Women wants to merge several departments. BYAMANDADEPEW STAFF WRITER In response to a campus-wide survey, the Chancellor’s Task Force on Women has recommended that campus safety or ganizations coordinate their efforts to ad dress security concerns. The group wants to combine the cam pus safety committee, the department of public safety and SAFE Escort to mini UNABOMBER FROM PAGE 1 don’t have his tools yet. We want the irrefutable motherlode of evidence. ” One law enforcement official said Kaczynski grew up in Chicago and re ceived a graduate degree in mathematics from the University ofMichigan. He bought land in Montana 10-12 years ago and has been building a house-cabin there since then, the official said. The Unabomber’ s spree began at North ROSS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OFMCOICINE * Graduates licensed t practicing in the U.S. • Clinical affiliations with hospitals in the U.S. * High pass rate on U.S. Med Licensing Exam • FuSy equipped, state-of-the-art basic science facilities • Medical School Curriculum modeled after that in U.S. schools SCHOOL OF VETERINARY MEDICINE • Fourth year clinical training at affiliated U.S. veterinary schools * Low student-faculty ratio ♦ U.S. veterinary school curriculum, DVM/Ph.D faculty Financial Aid Available Fipr Those Who Qualify ; Accepting Applications For Fall 96 S Winter/Spring 97 terms. For further Information, Call or Write: ROSS UNIVERSITY 460 W 34th Street, New York, NY 10001 Phone (212) 279-5500 Qfaul f \\ll Famous Super Buffet 7 Days A Week! Menu Ordering & Take-Out Available Lunch: Everyday 11-2:30 Dinner: Everyday 4:30-10 or UNO ID. Dine-in only ZtrtAwintJ Offer expires 5/1/96 QUfti \jM University Square For Reservations & Lower Level vmj.x Take-Out Ca 11... ■ iiiin 1 $4 Fish Bow's j Kamikazis I N sl."*House M $2.25 Mexican Import Bottle ftj- 1 -'" y Kamikazis I ll____s224toJNGonll^Draft| mize bureaucracy. “It is very clear that we need to enhance existing services on campus,” said Judith Scott, University sexual harassment of ficer and task force member. “Effective communication enhances what we’ve al ready got.” Because of the concerns raised in the poll, the task force decided to take action in campus safety, said Noelle Granger, anatomy professor and co-chairwoman of the task force. “The task force asks for networking, which will allow for better publicity. This is all a part of public safety, ” Granger said. “Having one voice for safety would be more effective.” Granger said the task force planned to western University outside Chicago in May 1978. Three people have died and 23 more were injured in 15 subsequent Unabomber attacks; the most recent came April 24, 1995, when a timber industry executive was killed in Sacramento, Calif. Last September, The New York Times and The Washington Post published his 35,000-word treatise on the inhumanity of industrial society after he promised to stop planting bombs that kill people. There have been no such incidents since then. Approximately 3,000 Ross Alumni are Currently in Residencies or Private Practice In The U.S.A. UNIVERSITY & CITY meet at the end of next week to prioritize its proposals. Based on concerns raised by the survey, the task force has proposed improvement of the Point-2-Point shuttle system, resi dence hall security and campus parking. Other areas in which students expressed concern were the visibility of campus secu rity officers and improved lighting on walk ways. University Police Chief Donald Gold said he welcomed input from students and faculty. "These suggestions and other in put from the community are important to the Public Safety Department,” Gold said. “We are obviously not reaching everyone and are therefore not able to make people BROWN FROM PAGE 1 chief executive officer of Foster Wheeler Energy International, Clinton, N.J.; John A. Scoville, chairman of Harza Engineer ing Cos., Chicago; Paul Cushman IE, ex ecutive vice president of Riggs Bank; and Leonard Pieroni, chairman and chief ex ecutive office of Parsons Corp., Pasadena, Calif. The New York Times said reporter Nathaniel Nash was also among the pas sengers. Hours before the crash, Brown had sur prised U.S. peacekeeping troops in Tuzla, Bosnia with McDonald’s hamburgers and sports videotapes, including the just-con cluded NCAA basketball tournament. “Being a former Army man myself, I Have you had a change In career plans? 1 f le Grad, echod no longer an cptton? y ■ WMBs*m Are you Just getting started with your Job aearch? OKflfl Do you think ite too late to uee University Career IllkV, If yoc onswe-ed "YES" to any of these questions PIAN TO ATTEND ®i a special information session at University Career Services \ WHERE? 209 Hanes WHEN? Monday, April 22,330 pm Road "IJJ I * O Afctf Cekbntwfii ]§3> New Dining Area Available<^ J Buy any 6” or Foot Long Sub and J { Get CHIPS & SM. DRINK { l FTsEE t I and One coupon per customer. Expires 4/15/96. and The Most Intensive Course For The MOAT Columbia Review. INTENSIVE MCAT PREPARATION M.D.s Training and M.D.s-of-the-Future • Intensive MCAT preparation and medical school application/admissions assistance are all we do! • MCAT Experts: an independent course taught by academic M.D.s, top UNC and Duke M.D.-Ph.D. candidates, and English Department faculty. • 150+ Hours of detailed in-class instruction and real MCAT testing, problem solving, reading, and writing workshops, review groups, med school application and admission strategies, and tutoring. • 2,000 Pages of original take-home review notes, reading and writing study guides, MCAT and admissions strategy handouts, problem sets, and MCAT-quality timed practice exams. • Real MCAT Testing for in-class and take-home practice. • Direct Contact with young docs and med students. • Tutoring and med school application help included. • Lower Tuition than other courses. | §IP| _3?Classes Ijjffijjl Filling! ENROLL NOW! ✓ the most hours ✓ the best instructors ✓ the best materials ✓ the best results ✓ the lowest cost UNC's Intensive MCAT Prep Course! aware of security issues. Any issues identi fied are worthy of examination.” Emphasis on coordinating safety groups coincides with the public safety department's current action, Gold said. The department maintains regular com munication with the Campus Security Committee and SAFE Escort, he said. Suggestion boxes placed around cam pus are a means of communicating student concerns about safety. These boxes were put in place two months ago by the Office of Student Af fairs, said Student Body Vice President Lindsay Rae Mclntyre, a former member of Student Congress’s Student Affairs Com mittee. know what being away from home is like, ” Brown told the soldiers. “So we thought we would bring a little bit of home to you. ” Even before getting the Clinton Cabinet post, Brown was a fixture in Washington political circles. He was a former Senate aide to Massa chusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. After leaving the Senate staff, he be came one of Washington’s top lobbyists. In 1990 he won the Democratic National Committee chairmanship, becoming the first black to lead either of the major par ties. Clinton rewarded Brown by naming him Commerce Secretary. Brown’s frequent foreign trips became a magnet for Republican criticisms. His personal financial dealings also were criticized and were the subject of an inves tigation by an independent counsel. 1-800-300-PREP Schools Propose Budget Plans to Commissioners ■ The budget will help pay for anew elementary school and an addition to the new high school. BY RICHARD RAY STAFF WRITER The Orange County Board of Commis sioners took its first official look Monday at a proposed budget for spending in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro school district. The commissioners discussed this year’s Capital Improvement Plan, which outlines the county’s total construction budget. While the CIP covers a 10-year period, it is reviewed annually and is approved along with the county’s operational budget each June. This year’s proposed CIP budget in cludes $ 120 million for capital spending in the next decade. Of that money, $95 mil lion is designated for the capital needs of Orange County’s schools. These capital needs include a sl4 million elementary school and a $ 10.8 million addition to East Chapel Hill High in the city district, as well as numerous renovation projects through out the county. Orange County commissioner Bill Crowther said the board had not discussed Campus Calendar THURSDAY UNC OUTING CLUB meeting is canceled. Meeting next week will include officer elections. Meet at 7 p.m. in 304 Woollen Gym. BLACK UNDERGRADUATE/GRADUATE MIXER PLANNING MEETING today from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the Sonja H. Stone Black Cultural Center. YACKETY YACK Photography Editor and Business Manager applications due today in Union 106. ITEMS OF INTEREST PLAYMAKERS REPERTORY COMPANY’S 20th anniversary season continues with “From the Mississippi Delta” by Endesha Ida Mae Holland. Directedby guest directorTazewell Thompson. This autobiographical and inspirational work tuns through April 7. L.D. BURRIS, local artist and percussionist who has performed with the Chuck Davis Dance En semble, will teach free workshops today and April 9 from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p .m. in Woollen Gym, Studio A. MIGUEL DE LA MADRID, former president of Mexico, will discuss presidential leadership dur ing a free, public talk April 9 at 4:30 p.m. m the Morehead Banquet Hall. A reception will follow. The talk is sponsored by the Duke-UNC Program in Latin American Studies. J L North Carolina Center far Reproductive Medicine EGG DONORS WANTED Please help our infertility couples. Will pay SISOO for completed donation. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 1-919-233-1680 H HAPPY PASSOVER fttwifi NX* Hillel! Daily Kosher Lunches Reservations Requested Call 942-4057 $3 OFF Any Nails/Waxing Combo ** Exp.4/15/96 ..*9#.' ! .*JK NAILS WAXING 4 Full Set S2B Underarms sll | •; l CiArlr Fill-Ins sls Eyebrows $8 I | Half Legs S2O H, ; I # (f,owi 942-7177 Nails-Tanning-Waxing-Massages j "rain nr r hint*" o 3 miles from campus, 15-501 s. & | _L _Smlth Level_Roadat_Sta r Point EXTRA ORDINARY Unique shops 6c restaurants, a-v essential services 6c free . .. , ; At !] l< : tic w° rld . . . Aesthetic Hairstyling Jr u customer parking Central Carolina Bank •/T'SnS^fi in the heart of Chapel Hill Florist (K downtown Circ| e Travel /(** oC a* 3 ** l ™ l " ?. n ash r photo S Ken's Quickie Mart * \ * •/ Looking Glass Cafe \ * *V^ Dottle Northmp, ASID \ • The Painted Bird \* / . • Peacock Alley • • Peacock's Nest • • * • • / The Shoe Doctor • • *.** # Y' Shoes at the Square • / Swensen's Ice Cream •/ * T'boli Imports 35 Chinese Restaurant *| 1 \ JJJ °P tometric E ? e JIM ” Franklin -j!?.: 929 ' 0431 • Downtown Chapel Hill 133 & 145 West Franklin St. <Et|r Sally (Tar Heel changing the CIP budget at Monday ’ s meet ing. “It was simply presented,” he said. “We talked a bit about schools but imme diately decided more work sessions are needed. It will be discussed at at least two more meetings, and there will be public hearings prior to budget discussions.” Superintendent Neil Pedersen said the commissioners are looking at the same school spending proposal as the one ap proved by the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Board of Education in March. “The capital budget is different than the operational budget in the fact that the county commissioners have already told us howmuch money is available,” Pedersen said. “We developed a budget within those cost constraints. Normally, there are not major changes made to these budgets." Pedersen said the county was not likely to cut any of the school system’s requested items in the budget. “They shouldn’t be cut,” he said. The county commissioners will con tinue discussing the CIP budget over the next few months. They will also decide how the building projects will be funded. Under the current proposal, the major building projects for the Chapel Hill- Carrboro school district will be funded with the sales tax, rather than with a prop erty tax increase. A final CIP will be ap proved in late June. The Black Student Movement UMOJA AWARDS BANQUET will be held April 10at6:30 p.m. in the Skipper Bowles Building. DR. EDWARD WAGNER, director of the Cen ter for Health Studies in Seattle, will discuss “Careers in Preventive Medicine" April 10 at noon in 357 Wing C, Division of Health Affairs building Free. An exhibition of mixed-media works by artist-in residence GHADA AMER will run thorough April 11. Amer will discuss her work Thursday at 6 p.m. in the Hanes Art Center auditorium. Mixed-media works by seniors JASONFRANK, KELLY JOHNSTON AND HONG-EUN KIM, 1996 honors candidates in studio art, will be on display in the Hanes Art Center Gallery from April 12 to May 2. For the Record Tuesday's article "Chapel Hill Police Sur pass Goal for N.C. Torch Run" should have said the Chapel Hill Police Department would be selling T-shirts at Center Court in Univer sity Mall on May 11 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. The Daily Tar Heel regrets the error.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 4, 1996, edition 1
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