®l|p Saily (Jar Heel
ESTROFF
From Page 1
culminate as the year takes shape.
For one, a task force on appointment,
promotion and tenure is expected to
submit a report sometime this semester,
which should outline potential revisions
to tenure guidelines.
The council also will debate a num
ber of system overhauls that have been
long in the making -one to the General
College curriculum and the other to the
Honor Court.
“I definitely want to see the Honor
Court reforms discussed, changed and
implemented,” Estroff said. “I realized
there was such large faculty dissatisfac
tion with the process.”
The past has shown, however, that
ASG
From Page 1
stitution states that individual student
governments are to send four voting del
egates to the association. One must be
the student body president, one must be
the officer for the school’s legislative
body, and the remaining two slots can
be filled at the university’s discretion.
But the UNC-CH Student Code has
more specific guidelines. Title IV, Article
THE Daily Crossword By Alan P. Olschwang
57 Flight from the
law
58 Windows fea
ture
60 Zeta-theta sep
arator
61 Patriot Thomas
62 Clan chief
63 Lair
64 Bronte and
Boleyn
65 Loudness units
DOWN
1 Obligation
2 Lawyer
Dershowitz
3 The Captain's
Toni
4 Former queen
of Spain
ACROSS
1 Palm fruits
6 Slow, in music
11 Shrinks'org.
14 1985 John
Malkovich film
15 Apply elbow
grease
16 One of the
twelve tribes
17 Dessert for
Chiquita?
19 California fort
20 Station from
Tenn.
21 On the market
22 Ballerina's skirt
23 Fuming
25 Amatory
27 To boldly go,
eg.
31 Brothers in
arms
32 Mississippi
senator
33 Coloring agents
34 Marsh
35 As far as
39 Actress Falco
41 From Pago
Pago
43 Bowler's tough
conversion
48 Lowest decks
49 Expire
50 Simply
51 Tribute
54 Male sib
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some of the University’s most contested
items of discussion have surfaced unex
pectedly, Estroff said.
Last year, a heavily divided campus
prompted the council to support UNC’s
proposed establishment of a satellite
campus in the Middle Eastern city of
Doha, Qatar.
Similarly, the Executive Committee
of the council found itself taking quick
action to endorse academic freedom
after the University’s summer reading
choice came under fire this year.
“You do get sidelined,” Estroff said.
“Who knew Qatar would come up?
Who knew the Quran would come up?”
What will keep her grounded during
her last year leading UNC’s faculty is
teaching, Estroff said.
“It saves me. This is going to sound
sort of drippy, but every semester when
111, Section 239 of the Student Code
states that Daum, as student body presi
dent, shall serve as a voting delegate on
the ASG and that she must appoint two
other delegates -one a graduate student,
the other an undergraduate - who must
be approved by the Student Affairs
Committee and Student Congress.
Title 11, Article XII, Section 428 also
states that the speaker of Congress is
supposed to be the fourth voting dele
gate but that the speaker can appoint
someone to take his place at any time.
5 Wind in and out
6 Diminish
7 Montreal player
8 17th-century
actress Gwyn
9 Three-pronged
spear
10 Giant great
11 Tropical rodent
12 4th episode
13 Cite as perti
nent
18 Pros' foes
22 Kiddy
24 Jacob the jour
nalist
26 Musical dir.
27 Downcast
28 Layer
29 Warship group
ing
30 Charged parti
cle
34 Repair
35 Diamond
arbiters
36 Vegetable
grown on sup
ports
37 Mai cocktail
38 Can. prov.
39 6th sense
■ll 12 13
16
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36 37 38
43 44 45 46 147 ““
48 """"TBHBV, "•
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From Page One
I meet my students, it reminds me of
why I’m here.”
Taking all that lies ahead into consid
eration, Estroff said, it will be difficult for
her to embody all of the faculty’s diverse
values and ideals.
“I don’t think any one person could
do that,” she said. “I hope I do reflect
some of their best and minimize some of
their worst.”
It’s also important to realize that
whatever stances the faculty take, stu
dents will be involved in the process,
Estroff said.
“They need to understand that
shared governance is tripartite,” she
said. “The good news is, we’re on the
same side - unless it’s grades or money.”
The University Editor can be reached
at udesk@unc.edu.
Hiller said the ordeal brings up a
broader issue the need to search for any
further inconsistencies in the Student
Code. “It’s going to take three or four
people who know the code really well,”
he said. “We’ll sit down and address these
things.... It’s not an immediate concern.”
All appointments go before the
Student Affairs Committee tonight and
the full Student Congress on Sept. 3.
The University Editor can be reached
at udesk@unc.edu.
(02002 Tribune Media Senricee, Inc.
All rights reserved.
52 Ken or Lena
53 Collect ore
55 Clair or Coty
56 Billfold fillers
58 Health resort
59 Pi follower
40 Kind of hands?
41 Hosiery
mishaps
42 Phases
43 Hoodwinked
44 Baroque
45 "Tracey Takes
On" star
46 Rogers or
Campanella
47 Makes joyous
BOWLES
From Page 1
“I want to make sure we have strong
national economic policies,” Bowles
said. “And that means putting people
back to work. It’s a tough job market out
there.”
He also cited improving public edu
cation at all levels, revamping the
national healthcare system and protect
ing the environment as top priorities.
When pressed by an audience mem
ber during a cordial question-and
answer session, Bowles said he would
support President Bush in a military ini-
MARYLAND
From Page 1
the play say it was picked for its depiction
of a community healing alter a tragedy.
“Everybody in America had a very
difficult fall of 2001, and ... because of
our proximity to the Pentagon ... (we)
were very hard hit,” said Linda
Coleman, a UM-College Park professor
who served on the selection committee.
Coleman added that she anticipated
possible controversy but hoped that the
variety of perspectives presented in the
play would quell people’s fears.
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Student Membership in the
UNC General Alumni Association is...
Everything you want
BBQ and Benefits Packet Distribution
Wednesday, Aug. 28th, spm-7pm, Main Quad (in front of Wilson Library)
Rain Site: Carmichael Residence Hall Ballroom
* Want to bring a friend who’s not a member?
All the nonmember will need to do is join.
To receive you member T-shirt, backpack and local discounts, pius all the
alumni networking dates and other program information, you must pick up
your benefits packet at the locations and times listed below.
September 3, 5,6 ~ln the Pit, 10am-2pm
September 4 ~ Granville Towers, spm-7pm
September 9 ~ At the Business School, 10am-2pm
■ ft Cookouts, holiday ft Networking with
concerts, exam breaks faculty and alumni
ft Custom-designed T-shirt ft Extern program
M| ft Local merchant discounts ft Internship ads in the
” ft $75 discount on Kaplan Carolina Alumni Review
prep courses and access ft Helping Hands community
to practice sessions service projects
General 1111
Alumni 1111 1 |
'rT * 9 0
GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
THE UNI VERS IT Y OF ■ N ORT H CARO LIN A :
tiative against Iraq given that Bush was
willing to make his case to U.S. citizens.
“I believe that, at the end of the day,
the president will be able to make his
case,” he said. “This Saddam Hussein is
a bad guy.”
Margaret Teich, an undeclared fresh
man, said that she found Bowles’ speech
charming but that she thinks the election
will come down to more than folksy
campaigning.
“1 liked his down-home approach,”
Teich said. “(But) I think it will be a dif
ficult primary for him.”
The State & National Editor can be
reached at stntdesk@unc.edu.
“The Laramie Project” was per
formed at UNC in fall 2001 by the
Play Makers Repertory Company.
The UNC audience was supportive
of the production, said Play Makers
Artistic Director David Hammond. He
emphasized that the play details the
effects of hatred and intolerance rather
than promoting any one lifestyle.
“I don’t know how you could sit
through it and find anything offensive,”
he said. “What’s offensive about ‘love
thy neighbors’?”
The State & National Editor can be
reached at stntdesk@unc.edu.
Tuesday, August 27, 2002
VOTE
From Page 1
Moeser said he expects more stu
dents will turn out because the location
is so close, especially for students who
do not have cars.
“There is no reason not to vote when
it’s this convenient,” he said.
The voting center will be open from
9 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays between
now and Sept. 10. Anyone in line at 5
p.m. on Sept. 10 will be allowed to vote.
Moeser said he hopes students are
not the only ones to use the facility.
“I hope all faculty, staff and students
all take advantage of this,” he said
Overcash said he thinks students will
be more likely to vote at a polling place
on campus because they are familiar
with the area.
He said that many students often do
not know where to go to vote on
Election Day and that even if they know
the location of the polling site, they
might not be familiar enough with the
area to know how to get there.
He said, “If students actually go out
and vote, we can start being taken seri
ously in Orange County.”
The University Editor can be reached
at udesk@unc.edu.
5