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Top Stories From the
State, Nation and World
In The
News
Thousands Contribute
To Floyd Relief Fund
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Students pass by a bulletin board littered with student election fliers in the lobby of Carmichael Residence
Hall. Tuesday was the first full day student candidates could post campaign notices announcing their
candidacies. Student elections will be held Feb. 15.
RESUME DROP (you may also bring cover letters)
FEBRUARY 9, 8:30 am-3:00 pm, 211 HANES HALL
For the New York Recruiting Alliance
(New'York City Interviews on March 27,2000)*
Organizations Participating**
Advertising Law (Legal Research)
• £>V(, • Cravath, Swaine & Moore
Agency Trainee Corporate Legal Assistant
• Bates USA Litigation Assistant
| Assistant Account Executive • Brown & Wood
Junior Media Planner Legal Assistant
• Foote, Cone & Belding (FCB) • White & Case
Assistant Media Planner Legal Assistant
Assistant Account Executive . skaddeil( Arps , slate, Meagher & Flont
i • Grey Advertising Legal Assistant
Assistant Account Executive i . Sullivan & Cromwell
Assistant Medta Planner 1 Legal Assistant
. Saatchi & Saatchi (must prepare 1-2 I |. orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe
I page response to "What is the best I I Legal Assistant
advice you were ever given and why?") | ■
Assistant Account Exec. Trainee
Assistant Media Planner „
. Rapp Collins Research/tVot-For
Account Coordinator Profit/Healthcare/Science
• Young & Rubicam/The Media Edge
Assistant Media Planner B * ltv °f NY/Parks & Recreation
Assistant Broadcast Buyer fl "Interns
Print Specialist 1 • Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer
Media Research Analyst fl Center
fl Research Technicians
I Session Assistant
Research Study Assistants
I • Springer-Verlag
__ , . | (scientific publisher-see "Publishing”)
Markcting/Commumca tions ■
/Consulting
v Publishing
• Cox/Harrington, Righter£rParsons (HRP) , °
Sales Assistant • Gruner & Jahr, USA Publishing
Research Analyst Consumer Marketing
•Internships - Sales, TV Programming Marketing Research
• E-Commerce Group Finance
Business Analyst . John Wiley & Sons
Systems Analyst Editorial
Marketing Associate Production
• Gruner & Jahr, USA New Media
(see "Publishing") Marketing
■ymmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmJL springer - verlag
Editorial Assistant
Promotion Assistant
Production Assistant
Production Asst. - Mktg. l< Comm.
_ T ii rt • Customer Services
University Career Services ; ing Assislant
~ • •• (n, i , rr • • Scholastic Inc.
Division 01 Student Affairs Editorial Assistant
Marketing Assistant
Operations Assistant
•This program requires you to travel to New York at your expense - further
information available in 211 Hanes Hall.
••Information on these organizations is available in 208 Hanes Hall.
RALEIGH - More than $lB million
has been donated to the Hurricane
Floyd Relief Fund to aid victims of the
disastrous floods that swept through east
ern North Carolina on Sept. 16 because
of Floyd, Hunt’s office said Tuesday.
Gov. Jim Hunt established the fund
the day after the hurricane. Since then,
more than 65,000 individuals and busi
nesses have contributed.
The money has been used to help
eastern North Carolinians make mort
gage payments, begin home repairs, pay
utility bills and replace appliances, fur
niture and other household goods.
Each county received money from
the fund based on damage assessments
and registration with the Federal
Emergency Management Agency.
County managers and local social ser
IT'S THAT TIME AGAIN
vices directors then convened local
committees to determine who would get
the money.
So far, three allocations have been
made from the fund, including: a $6 mil
lion disbursement Oct. 8, a $7 million
ouday Nov. 3 and a $3.5 million alloca
tion in December, the governor’s office
said.
9 Avalanche Motorists
Discovered Tuesday
ANCHORAGE, Alaska Nine
motorists were rescued by a state police
helicopter Tuesday after spending the
night in their cars, trapped by avalanch
es that buried a highway.
The travelers had kept in touch with
rescuers by cellular phone as they wait-
News
ed along the Seward Highway. They
were taken out in three groups by state
police and taken to a diner for breakfast.
They were in good condition.
“We ate everything they had in the
restaurant, and now we’re starting all
over again,” said Darwin Peterson.
“I told my wife when I get back
home, I’m not going as far as the post
office for the rest of the winter.”
Some of the people wrapped up for
the night in sleeping bags, while others
were in a family van that had a propane
heater.
They spent the time playing crib
bage, getting acquainted and talking to
troopers by phone.
Most Alaskans carry warm clothing,
sleeping bags and survival gear when
they travel extensive distances in the
winter.
Blizzard conditions had prevented
rescuers from dropping supplies such as
food and blankets overnight, when tem
peratures dipped into the low teens.
The rescuers had to wait for the
stormy weather to clear to reach the
motorists.
Ten other motorists trapped by
another avalanche elsewhere along the
Seward Highway were rescued late
Monday by an Alaskan construction
crew, using a front-end loader to clear
the snow.
Alternating freezes and thaws in
December created a base of crusty,
unstable snow, and a series of storms
deposited deep snow over the past
week. The combination has created the
worst avalanche danger in 20 years.
Associated Press
APPLICATIONDEADLINE
Stop by 12 Caldwell
Hall for more info.
OPEN <s DELIVERING til 3am!
THE ORIGINAL
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"YOUR MOM WANTS YOU TO EAT AT JIMMY JOHN’S!"
•COPVRISHT JIMMY JOVNS INC 1986. 1990. 1992. 1993. 1996 AU. WCHTS RESERVED
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Sit-In Initiator Recalls
Fateful Day: Feb. 1,1960
Associated Press
GREENSBORO - Exacdy 40 years
ago Tuesday, Jibreel Khazan and three
other black N.C. Agricultural &
Technical University freshmen galva
nized the civil rights movement with a
sit-in at an all-white lunch counter.
He said the principles underlying the
protest at the downtown Woolworth’s
store on Feb. 1, 1960, are still worth
fighting for today.
“We were prepared to give up our
lives if necessary," said Khazan, former
ly known as Ezell Blair Jr., during a
break at Tuesday’s observance, held in
the old store, which still contains a rem
nant of the lunch counter and green and
red stools from that era.
Signs behind the counter offer a slice
of cherry pie for 10 cents and chocolate
milk for a nickel. Before the sit-ins,
blacks were discouraged from eating
there.
“I must admit 1 preferred to eat my
mother’s cooking,” he said. “But we
came for the principle. A lot of people
didn’t want us to sit down and eat with
them. For some people, that was like us
coming to eat at their dining room
table.”
On Feb. 1, 1960, Khazan, Franklin
for Fall 2000, Academic Year 2000 & Summer 2000 Programs is
February 15, 2000
Apply online at http://study-abroad.unc.edu
No late Applications will be accepted.
Wednesday, February 2, 2000
McCain, David Richmond and Joseph
McNeil ordered Cokes and doughnuts
at the whites-only counter. They were
refused service, and they refused to
leave. Their peaceful act of civil disobe
dience touched off similar protests
across the South and further actions at
the Greensboro Woolworth’s.
Khazan recalls a white man several
stools away who stood up and told the
waitress: “You ought to serve these boys.
“I remember two white nuns who
told us, ‘Boys, stand up for your rights,’”
he said. “I learned then you can’t judge
a book by its cover.”
Khazan said the old dime store
should be converted into a civil rights
museum to remind today’s youth of
what they can accomplish.
“The important thing is that these sit
ins were led by youth,” he said. “They
came to define leadership in this coun
try. Without them, John F. Kennedy
may not have been elected president.
And Martin Luther King Jr. may not
have won the Nobel Peace Prize.
“This movement was the catalyst for
all of the civil and human rights move
ments in America,” he said.
Khazan also met in the chilly store
with youths from Guilford County
schools.
Study
7
Abroad