2 Wednesday, August 30, 2000 Pi- II ju The University and Towns In Brif.f National Blood Bank Dry, Needs Donors The National Red Cross is experi encing a critical shortage of blood, said Casey Copp, a Red Cross representa tive. The Red Cross will sponsor a blood drive from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in Union 205,206 and 208. Copp said the situation is urgent as well as disheartening. She urges stu dents to donate their blood for a worthy cause. Former Union Director Howard D. Henry Dies Howard D. Henry of Viroqua, Wis., died Monday. Henry served as the director of the Student Union, starting in 1956. Henry is survived by his four children. Medical Cards Available For Senior Citizens The Chapel Hill Police Department, in conjunction with the Orange County Department of Aging and the AARP, has begun a program of Emergency Medical Information Cards. The cards are designed to encourage senior citizens with specialized medical needs to record information such as doctor’s names, allergies and medical conditions, storing it in a central loca- Campus Calendar Wednesday 10 a.m. - Interested in team sports? Meet representatives of the UNC Sport Clubs and have all your questions answered. More than 40 student sport and recreational organizations will be in the Pit for the membership drive. The rain date will be Friday in the "Wr ORDd^^Treaeur e s , y mm Carrboro • 933-5544 Durham- 286-7262 Chapel Hill • 928-0100 ***** TUESDAY AND * WEDNESDAY EVENINGS FROIVI 6 TO 9 PM AT SECOND FLOOR OF DEY HALL (Rooms 205, 207,206, 208,209) Peer tutors available on a drop-in basis first come, first served—to help in the following courses: French 1-4 • Spanish 1-4 • Italian 1-4 German 1-4 • Portuguese 1-3 (Wednesdays) Latin (Tuesdays) • Math 10, 17, 18, 30, 31, 32, 33 Biol 11, 50 • Chem 11, 21, 41, 61 • Phys 24, 25 (Wednesdays) Econ 10, 100 (Tuesdays) • Business 24, 71 (Tuesdays) Math 22 (Tuesdays) • Statistics 11,31 (Tuesdays) Political Science 41 • Astronomy 31 (Tuesdays) Geology 11 (Wednesdays) • Anthropology 10 (Wednesdays) For additional help in chemistry and math, try these free resources: The Math Help Center 09 Gardner 3:30-7:30 pm M-Th The Chemistry Resource Center 225 Venable Hall 12:00-6:00 pm M-Th Questions? Call 962-3782 Sponsored by the Peer Tutoring Program and UNC Learning Center tion. The cards will be distributed at the Chapel Hill Senior Center on Elliot Road, at the Chapel Hill Police Department and at University Mall. Volunteer Coaches Needed for Fall Season The Carrboro Parks and Recreation Department is accepting volunteer coaching applications for the 2000 Youth 13- to 14-year-old Baseball League. Coaches must be able to teach play ing skills, sportsmanship and be able to effectively organize practices and com municate with players and parents. For more information or to receive an application, call Craig Wolfe at 968- 7703. Larry King Scheduled To Speak at University Larry King, the host of CNN’s talk show “Larry King Live,” is scheduled to speak at UNC on Oct. 20 on ethics in television news. King is the top-rated on-air personal ity at CNN and a 40-year veteran of the broadcasting business. The speech will be held at 3 p.m. in 111 Carroll Hall. Seating will be limited to the first 425 people to arrive. University to Co-host Diabetes Conference The UNC Diabetes Care Center will co-host “Taking Control of Your Diabetes,” a nonprofit conference and health fair for people who have diabetes and their loved ones. The event, held from 7:30 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. at the Raleigh Civic and Convention Center, provides informa tion about preventing and controlling diabetes. Free nutritional counseling will be available. For more information, e-mail www.tcoyd.org. Great Hall of the Student Union. For more information, call 962-1013 or e-mail smbradle@email.unc.edu. 5 p.m. - A general interest meeting for Womentoring will be held in 39 Graham Memorial. Womentoring pairs first-year under graduate women with a faculty or staff Womentor for the duration of one aca demic year. Students who participate are required to attend monthly workshops Investigation Continues in Ark. Shooting The Associated Press FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - A University of Arkansas graduate student found dead near an English professor in an apparent murder-suicide had been kicked out of a degree program last week after a decade of lackluster work. English professor John Locke, 67, and James Easton Kelly, 36, were found dead Monday, lying face-up on the floor of Locke’s office. Both had been shot in the abdomen, university police Capt. Brad Bruns said. The .38-caliber revolver, which Kelly bought at a pawn shop five years ago, was found between the men; investiga tors worked Tuesday to find out who shot whom. “We don’t want to say it was one way Clinton: Disbarment Too Harsh, Unprecedented The Associated Press LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - President Clinton said Tuesday he should not be disbarred over his testimony in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case, telling a state judge that losing his law license is too harsh a penalty. In a five-page response to a com plaint filed by the Arkansas Supreme Court Committee on Professional Conduct, the president said that he would not receive such a stiff sanction if his case was handled like similar cases. “On the basis of the relevant facts, the governing law and the applicable deci sions of the Arkansas courts ..., a sanc tion of disbarment would be excessively focusing on leadership skills and women’s issues. Womentoring is open only to first-year women 5:30 p.m. - All are welcome to attend Student Night at the Newman Catholic Student Center! Dinner is included and will be fol lowed by a presentation on fixing up a residence hall room. Tips on being orga nized, creative and fun will be included in the presentation. t Suffering from Empty Pocket Syndrome? Participate in our life-saving & financially :; \\\ rewarding plasma donation program. jkrTp' IMMEDIATE COMPENSATION! If Donors Earn up to S2OO per Month! I ★ New donots earn S2O for first visit, $35 for the second visit within 7 days, i New donors call for appointment. Call or stop by: parking validated Sera-Tec iologicals^^ Under New Management 109 1/2 E Franklin St, Chapel Hill 942-0251 • M-Th 10-6, Fri 10-4 Welcome ‘war Back! Lunch & Late Night 11am-2pmor 11pm-2am Medium 1-Topping Pizza only $5.99 2+2+2 2 Medium, 2 Topping Pizzas, & 2 Liter $12.99 Large 1 Topping Pizza and a 2-Liter ONLY $9.99 We accept UNC OneCards, Mastercard & Visa UNC Campus/ East Chapel Hill North Chapel Hill Carrboro 967*0006 932*9500 929*0246 ►open Late Till 2:ooam News and it turn out to be a different way, with the location of the gun and the two bod ies. It was not obvious at the scene,” said university police Lt. Gary Crain. A panel of six professors voted Aug. 21 to dismiss Kelly from the English department’s doctoral program because he habitually dropped classes and made insufficient progress in 10 years as a graduate student. Locke, who was Kelly’s faculty adviser, was on the com mittee but abstained from the vote. The committee allowed Kelly to con tinue his studies as a non-degree student. Professor Brian Wilkie recalled that in the mid-1990s Kelly bombed on an oral examination, stumbling through answers and failing to show mastery of required reading material. “He didn’t take his work very seri harsh, impermissibly punitive and unprecedented in the circumstances of this case,” Clinton’s lawyers wrote. Pulaski County Circuit Judge Leon Johnson said he expected to receive Clinton’s filing Tuesday but otherwise would not discuss the case, including when it might be scheduled for a hear ing or trial. The state conduct committee says the president lied about his relationship with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky when asked about it, under oath, in January 1998. Jones’ lawyers asked the president about Lewinsky while a federal judge presided over his deposition. In a lawsuit filed against Clinton on A $2 donation is recommended. 6 p.m. - The first of three available treasurers’ orientations will be held in 247 Phillips Hall. All student groups receiving funds from Student Congress must send a representative to one of these orienta tions. For more information, call Student Body Treasurer Patrick Frye at 962- 4964. 6 p.m. - The Campus Y will hold a ously,” Wilkie said. “He never struck me as a sinister person, just not very moti vated.” Wilkie said Kelly had been dropped from the program at least three times. Each time, until last week, the faculty had voted to reinstate him. A woman enrolled in the school’s graduate program in the 1990s said Kelly’s performance was erratic. “He wasn’t ever quite on the same track as the rest of us as far as what he was supposed to do for class and coming to class,” said Angie Albright, an assis tant professor of English at Georgia Southwestern State. “He seemed nice enough, but distant all the time.” Police said Kelly had no criminal record and that there was no indication on his university record of discipline June 30, the conduct committee’s prose cutor accused the president of lying to spare himself embarrassment. In the response filed Tuesday, Clinton’s lawyers acknowledged that the president was attempting to save face. Clinton “took actions motivated in part by a desire to protect himself and others from embarrassment,” the lawyers wrote. Jones filed suit in May 1994, alleging Clinton made a crude sexual advance toward her three years earlier in a Little Rock hotel room. Jones had hoped to use evidence of the Lewinsky affair as part of an attempt to show a pattern of predatory behavior. Wright, however, said the Lewinsky general interest meeting in Carmichael Ballroom. All those who want to get to know the 19 different committees and find out about Campus Y should plan to attend. 6:30 p.m. - All those interested in international issues, leadership positions or Model United Nations are encour aged to attend the United Nations Organization interest meeting in Union 205. For more information, contact Carrie Callahan at carrieec@email.unc.edu. Thursday 5 p.m. - The UNC chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People will hold its first general body meeting of the Happy Hours/ FREE Bagel with Cream Cheese * Wednesday & Thursday, August 30 & 31, 2000 6:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. *Show your student, faculty or staff ID and get a freshly baked bagel topped with cream cheese of your choice. No coupon necessary. Limit one per person per day. Offer good during above dates and times only. Not good in combination with other offers. RRUEGGER’S BAGELS™ CHAPEL HILL: 104 W. Franklin St. • Eastgate Shopping Center DURHAM: 626 Ninth St. • Commons at University Place (1831 MLK Pkwy at University Dr.) RALEIGH: 2302 Hillsborough St.* North Hills Mall • Pleasant Valley Promenade • Sutton Square, Falls of the Neuse Rd. Mission Valley Shopping Center • Stonehenge Shopping Center, Creedmoor Rd. • Harvest Plaza Six Forks & Strickland Rds. CARY: 122 S.W. Maynard Rd. • Preston Business ’ Center, 4212 Cary Pkwy. GARNER: Hwy. 401 at Pinewinds Dr. Open Seven Days a Week QJlje Satly 3ar Brel problems. But Locke apparently had some reservations: when Kelly recently sched uled a meeting with Locke, the professor was reluctant to meet in private, Wilkie said. “He said he was going to have it in the department office, not his own office,” Wilkie said. “I asked him if (Kelly) seemed violent, and he said, ‘You never know.’” On Monday, the men could be heard arguing behind the locked door to- Locke’s office. Witnesses reported hear ing three shots. When police entered,* they found four empty shell casings in’ the gun. A caller to 911 reported hearing a: man he believed to be Locke say during the shooting, “I didn’t do anything.” material was not essential tojones’ case, and later dismissed Jones’ lawsuit. Clinton’s lawyers said Tuesday that the testimony at the center of the dis barment lawsuit was so minor that strip ping the president of his law license would be too severe of a penalty. Matt Glavin, president of the Southeastern Legal Foundation of Atlanta, which had asked for Clinton’s disbarment, said after Tuesday’s filing that the proposed sanctions were not too harsh. “Honesty and candor are absolute prerequisites in our bar,” Glavin said. “The Supreme Court has made it clear what’s required for mem bership in the Arkansas bar. Mr. Clinton doesn’t meet those standards.” year in Union 211. Those interested in joining are encouraged to attend. 6 p.m. - The Carolina Academic Team will hold a general information meeting/practice in 321 Greenlaw Hall. Anyone interested in Jeopardy!, Who Wants to Bea Millionaire, quiz bowl, or in putting trivia knowledge to good use is invited to come. 6 p.m. - Hip Hop Nation will hold an interest meeting for all prospective members in the Student Union. altf laily u!ar HJrrl Wednesday, August 30,2000 Volume 108, Issue 63 P.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Matt Dees,‘Editor: 962-4086 Advertising & Business: 962-1163 News, Features, Sports: 962-0245