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2 Wednesday, December 6, 2000 CM From Page 1 know the number the night before even if I go out at 6 a.m. on Saturday." Sarah Humber, a sophomore classi cal studies major, also said she didn’t think the changes to the distribution were warranted. “1 don’t think a lot of people (get multiple bracelets). Most people just get their own - I haven’t seen any results from it.” She said the changes likely will cause problems. “It seems complicated on Saturday morning,” she said. “It’ll be Welcome To The Site Of The New Millennium’' Where MONEY and EXCITEMENT keep CROWING ! solveandwin.com Come Unravel Our Web!" v mcaT Tonight: Free MCAT Passage Seminar! Chapel Hill Kaplan Center 6:30-B:3opm Classes start Saturday, January 13th! Call today to enroll in the #1 MCAT prep course. KAPLAN 1-800-KAP-TEST www.kaptest.com * MCAT is a registered trademark of the Association of American Medical Colleges. The County COI 10 9 6 of Monmouth Uinterim Term EDDI Term runs from .|| January 2 to January lb J*P| You can earn JgSBBk 3 credits in 2 weeks Call our hotline: g mgs for class listings y Registration begins November 27 na Visit our website at www brookdale•cc .ni • us for course listings and descriptions An equal opportunity/affirmative action institution more of a process and of course the con fusion will be worse.” But Slatkoff said the change should have little effect on the Saturday morn ing distribution process. “I at first anticipated a 30-minute addition (to the process) before we even started (giving out) the tickets, but some people who have been involved with this kind of thing before said they think it might not take that long,” she said. “The biggest place we can get help is from the students - they need to get organized and get out there.” Slatkoff said this is the only way to ensure fairness in the distribution From Page One because it is not efficient to scan UNC ONE Cards when handing out bracelets, another option CAA consid ered. “If people think it takes a long time on Saturday morning, getting bracelets would be just as bad as Saturdays,” she said. And Pruitt said any inconveniences that might occur will be worthwhile. “Our responsibility to the student body is that if the system isn’t as effi cient and effective and fair as need be, then it’s our responsibility to make adjustments to improve its stability,” he said. “The change is not going to hurt anyone at all. It’s just going to help things out and level the playing field.” Kim Minugh and Karey Wutkowski contributed to this report. The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. Campus Calendar Today 10 a.m. - Circle K will be in the Pit collecting new toys for Toys for Tots! Make the holidays a little happier for a child in need. 7 p.m. - Dr. Robin Watson, a visiting economist from the Central Intelligence Agency, will speak in 08 Gardner Hall on the role of economics in the ClA’s mission. A question-and-answer session and refreshments will follow Watson’s Summer School Abroad ! ' Spaces open in the following programs: • Belgium/Germany June 23-July 19 • Great Britain/Norway July 1 -27 • Greece May 20-June 17 • Oxford July 2-August 3 Registration continues through March 10, 2001 919 966 4364 www.unc.edu/summer CB 3340, 134 E FRANKLIN STREET WELCH From Page 1 and Welch said the family is now enjoying good times. “Everything’s worked out for the best," he said. “(We’re) doing great -as good as it’s ever been, without a doubt." Welch said his siblings had some bearing on everything from the person he is nowadays to where he’s attending college. Through their parents’ divorce, Welch said his older sister, Ashley, helped the rest of the kids through the tough times by dealing well with the situation herself. “She set the right example for all of us," he said. “My parents’ divorce was hard. It was really hard.” speech. 8 p.m. - CHispA will host “When I Was a Puerto Rican,” a one-woman play by Tere Martinez in the Great Hall of the Student Union. Thursday 3:30 p.m. - The UNC Institute on Aging and the N.C. Division on Aging will co-sponsor “The Future of the Long-Term Care Work Force: ‘lt’s Not Just the Economy, Stupid!”’ The speech will take place in the ball room of the Friday Center. Ashley graduated from UNC in 1997, and when it was time for her twin siblings to choose a college, she could give them the low-down. “She encouraged us,” Welch said. “She wasn’t forceful about it, but she knew we wouldn’t have regrets.” As Welch glides through his first semester at UNC, he wants to gain as much as possible - starting with his musical interests. “I didn’t have time for it earlier in the semester,” Welch said. But now he’s starting to spend more of his time making music. Welch recendy started taking banjo lessons and is looking for music-related UNC activities to involve himself in. He started playing the guitar in the eighth grade and picked up the banjo two years later. The freshman says it was older 5 p.m. - Why were blacks not allowed the right to vote? Join us for “Bamboozled: A Discussion of the NAACP Vote Hearings” in Union 211. The discussion is sponsored by the UNC chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. 7 p.m. - “Night of the Divas!,” a concert to benefit the Orange County Rape Crisis Center, will take place in the Great Hall of the Student Union. Tickets are $3. 7 p.m. - Want to volunteer and have fun? Come to a holiday dance with Carolina Campus Civitan in the Union Cabaret for members of ARC, an organization for mentally retarded oS elseV Johnson Luxej^ B X, / A % a? ) ■ A \ £ Blue Hand f ' M ZSZT**"* w (ft I A : Fi 932-4263 © m www.bluehandstore.com ry' 1 / L\ \p ? \ j jf\i i \ \w / I I Need extra cash for ■Sm Christmas? / 1 - v _ Participate in our life-saving & financially i . %J}\ A rewarding plasma donation program. immediate compensation; r/ih Donors Earn up to S2OO per Month! Wdr < m | \ ★ New donors earn $25 for first visit, Y v ) W!> for the second visit within 7 days. .yJ Regular donors receive $25 per donation. Call or stop by: parking validated Sera-Tec Siologicals^ Under New Management 109/2 E Franklin St, Chapel Hill • 942-0251 • M-Th 10-6, Fri 10-4 Cellar Door STAS Youth S^ngst Society} Wednesday, December 6 at s:3opm Undergraduates read from their original poetry and prose just published in the new issue of The Cellar Door. Refreshments will be served. Bull’s Head Bookshop UNC Student Stores • 962-5060 bullshead@store.unc.edu (Utjp lath) (Ear Uppl brother Stewart, a bass player, who got him into music by convincing their mother to buy him a guitar for his birthday. “It all came from my brother," he said. But while Welch says his brother is more of a jazz musician, his musical choice is bluegrass. “It’s the kind of music a lot of peo ple might not be familiar with,” he said. “But when they hear it, they real ly like it.” While Welch is paying close atten tion to everything that’s coming his way during his time at UNC, he’s hesi tant to make any final decisions. He’s just coasting through Carolina for now. The Features Editor can be reached at features@unc.edu. citizens. There will be food, prizes and fun - so come dance the night away! For the Record The photo accompanying the Dec. 5 article “Class Shares Findings on Environmental Racism” misidentified the speaker as senior Scott Washington. The student pictured was Cecil Outlaw. The Daily Tar Heel regrets the error. Gtyr Saily (Tar Hcrl Wednesday, December 6,2000 Volume 108, Issue 128 RO. Box 3257. Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Matt Dees. Editor, 962-4086 Advertising & Business, 962-1163 News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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