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4 Wednesday, April 12, 2000 PROPOSAL From Page 1 often grade more harshly than faculty." Under the C-START proposal, a ris ing senior would first contact a faculty member who would serve as a project adviser. The adviser would provide guidance and supervision to the student. The proposal appropriates a SSOO stipend for the adviser. During the fall of his or her senior year, the student would conduct research and participate in teacher train ing workshops. The senior would receive three hours of credit for “research, coordination, preparation and development work.” In the spring, the student-instructor would teach the new course and would CONGRESS From Page 1 tion would be one of the largest in the history of UNC’s student government, with at least 11 seats to be filled. “I’m hoping we can fill every seat," she said. “Unfortunately (the election) is close to finals, so we’ll need to advertise it well.” Bell said Congress would take a table in the Pit for a week prior to the elec tions both to encourage students to vote Course OpentotiwPubU^ Student Weekday Specials S2O with cart/ sll walking All Winter Merchandise 50% OFF with purchase of 18 hole green fee www.southwickgolf.com Vj* , Call for Tee Times 942-0783 ditS'SSC*'\ Directions: Take 54 West 20 miles to a stoplight. Take a ■ . 3 %\ left on Swepsonville Rd. and go 1 mile to a stop sign. Take js\ a right on Swepsonville-Saxapahaw Rd. and go Vh miles. Take 3 left on Boywood Rd. 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COUPON | EXPIRES JUNE 30, 2000 I Jjj" I LEAN-POLKfT) | lfi | i Save 50a sgKF&ii , HOT POCKETS', LEAN POCKETS', R® CROISSANT "if Ife' f HOT POCKETS*H,,nd PIZZA MINI’S*, or ■ 1 TOASTER BREAKS' Brand Melt* and Pizza 111 II Hill 111 III! 1111111111111 lllllltHill II 111 II 111 I I Tt, ,grvKltx*y fxjrrtvw*olpiodurl mri*Any ./** rorv IIH I I | 111111 111 111 I ■ stmrtM trtu COUPON NOT TRANSFERABLE UMrr ONE COUFHDN PER I I ll 11l I I 1 I PURCHASE h IN> h4Ar TM Wa the hri 111 | | II 111 |||| [ II | 1 v,.h*M>Mhs coupon pin* 0c t suhmmikd .n enmofcanc** with the terms of this II II II || 111 II I I 1 I Vital v* ’< -ctepmeO t-v dMxx 4*, •n*rrhaJiM- cy anyone || |H | I II II 111 111 I I I ..tsinwl tiy (M Amwxa Cnh 'Me Man to CN* |HI I 1111 I! 111 111 111 111 ■ CMS Department 4389S One Fawcett Drtv OH Rio TX 78840 5H U 3695"30050*"10 (8100)0 11151 J receive an additional 3 hours of academ ic credit. The proposal also allocates a stipend of SSOO to each student instructor. Several campus groups have already offered support, including the Center for Teaching and Learning, the Johnston Center for Undergraduate Excellence and the Black Student Movement. Miller said she hoped that the adminis tration would offer similar suppory. “Teaching assistants teach lab sections with great success. Graduate students, (some of whom) are fresh out of college, also teach classes," Miller said. “(The University) should be confident that it is capable of producing a student who is able to research and compile informa tion by the senior year.” The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. and to recruit people to run for the seats. Three of the empty seats represent graduate student districts, said former Graduate and Professional Student Federation President Lee Conner. “It’s always a bit of a chore to get all the graduate student seats filled because of the time commitment involved," he said. “But it is very important to be repre sented.” The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. TOLL From Page 1 she said. “It was truly a transformation of reality without knowing what I was doing. (The paintings) were related to true incidences." Russian soldiers freed Toll and her mother from seclusion in 1944. Toll MCCOY From Page 1 and develop in ways that prove appro priate,” he said. SEJ member Todd Pugatch said working with McCoy on the sweatshop issue demonstrated McCoy’s ability to listen to students. “(McCoy)’s not out there in the sense that you see him walking around cam pus, but every time we requested that he would address our concerns, he’s gotten to it,” he said. Richardson said the way in which McCoy addressed the labor situation was characteristic of his problem-solving tactics, generally seeking advice from many sources before making a decision. “Everything he has done is with con siderable consultation, and his activity with the WRC is exemplary of that,” Richardson said. “He is a very listening chancellor.” Kitchen said his decision-making involved advice from a number of sources. “He likes to gather all the inter ested parties at the same table,” she said. Chris Martens, co-chairman of the Chancellor Advisory Committee, also said the faculty had found McCoy to be a willing listener who took their input. “The faculty find him very respon sive, hard-working and organized, and I am very able to get feedback if I ever make a request,” he said. Another issue McCoy addressed was pedestrian safety, spearheading the for mation of a committee after accidents in WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO WITH THAT DEGREE? • Do you have classes in Sociology, English, Communication, Marketing or Business? itljD YPn'Yjn') Ever thought about a career in Television Advertising Saljs, yy L F L News or Promotion? For Immediate Opportunities in Raleigh and 30 Other Cities, detune To Our Open House 9k Starting 7pm # 4f! ■JSkm Please RSVP by April 14th to Jo Anne Ganey - 919-872-9535 Ext 3201 E-mail jganey@wlfl.sbgnet.com www.une.edu/cps Free Food, T-Shirt and Performances by the Clefs, Loreleis and CHiPS Project unc This Saturday on Polk Place. Registration Starts at B:3oam State moved to the United States in 1951 and has since written three books about her experiences during World War 11. She is now a professor of humanities at Rowan University and tours the country with her artwork. Sophomore Abby Karesh, a member of the Holocaust Remembrance Week Committee, said Toll brought Holocaust education to anew level. the fall drew attention to the issue. McCoy also had to unexpectedly respond to the devastation caused by Hurricane Floyd. “I was extremely impressed with the way he stepped up to deal with the hur ricane, really working to get aid,” Heinke said. McCoy asked the new Carolina Center for Public Service to take a lead ership role to coordinate and plan a campus response to the statewide dev astation. The center formed a task force of students, staff and faculty from across campus and a Hurricane Floyd Recovery Team. Despite these accomplishments, McCoy’s time is likely drawing to an end. Anew chancellor is expected to be in place by the end of the summer, although the chancellor search commit tee has already passed their original deadline of May Commencement. McCoy said that although he would miss his post, he looked forward to a more sedate lifestyle spending time with his family, golfing and reading. But he said some issues would prob ably remain unresolved by his adminis tration and he said he wished he had more time to address them. He said, “There is a long list of things the University still needs to do, espe cially addressing funding for salaries, capital needs and the enrollment growth on the horizon.” The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. “Her whole thing is Holocaust edu cation through art,” Karesh said. “She can relate to people in a different way. “When she’s talking, she’s talking as Nelly Toll, but her art speaks of what she was thinking then. It’s captured in the moment” Toll said she wanted the members of the audience to serve as messengers and tell others of the importance of Hunt Presses Congress To Expedite Floyd Aid Associated Press WASHINGTON - Farmers are on the verge of bankruptcy seven months after the devastation of Hurricane Floyd and cannot wait any longer for Congress to send emergency money, North Carolina Gov. Jim Hunt said after a White House meeting Tuesday. “The need is urgent, and we need for Congress to act now,” on a special bud get package for farmers and people flooded out of their homes, Hunt said. Hunt was in Washington for another in his series of lobbying trips on behalf of victims of the hurricane that leveled towns and farms in eastern North Carolina last fall. “It’s important that we keep up these efforts because we are at a critical junc ture,” Hunt said. “Farmers are planting crops and construction crews are begin ning to build homes. These projects are in jeopardy without additional financial support.” The House already approved about $2 billion for Hurricane Floyd relief this year, and a Senate spending panel rec ommended $1 billion. Hunt wants Congress to approve the money before lawmakers go home for a Eugenia Zukerman & the International Sejong Soloists I ■ I t “...a dream ensemble.” l9|||Hl LOW STUDENT AIRFARES Europe • Africa • Asia • South America More Than 100 Departure Cities! Eurailpasses • Bus Passes • Study Abroad _— - sfudenl universe •com IT S your world, explore it. www.StudentUniverse.com 800-272-9676 Buenos Aires Lima Santiago London Dublin Paris Nice Copenhagen Stockholm Oslo Amsterdam Berlin Munich Zurich Istanbul Slip Daily (Tar Hppl Holocaust remembrance. “As we look at artwork, I hope the power of the image will with you and will keep in your memory,” Toll said. “It is our responsibility, it is every one’s responsibility, to be vigilant so this catastrophe cannot happen again.” The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. spring break. Hunt said he is worried that Congress might drag its feet until next fall. He appealed for White House help during a meeting with White House Deputy Chief of Staff Maria Echaveste and sent a letter to Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott “telling him in the strongest way possible” that there is immediate need for flood victims. “Your leadership now in expediting congressional approval of supplemental funding is critical for victims of the storm, many of whom are still living in temporary housing trailers and cannot yet begin to rebuild their lives,” Hunt said in the letter. Lott, R-Miss., and other leaders decided earlier this month to indefinite ly delay a $4.5 billion package for hur ricane relief as well as U.S. efforts in Colombia and Kosovo. The amount had been approved by the Senate Appropriations Committee. Lott says the measure is too expen sive and would slow the Senate’s work on other legislation. He wants parts of it added to fiscal 2001 spending legisla tion, which could begin moving through Congress in several weeks. Fiscal 2001 begins Oct. 1. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 12, 2000, edition 1
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