Saily (Ear HM
TIMELINE
• JAN. 21: Candidate petitions are due to Board of
Elections.
• JAN. 27: Student body president candidates must
have met with the Board of Elections.
• JAN. 27: Money will be transferred from the
Student Activities Funds Office to Student Congress.
• JAN. 28 at 7 a.m.: Candidates may begin
spending funds and campaigning.
• FEB. 11: Genera! election
• FEB. 18: Runoff election will be held (if necessary)
GRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL
STUDENT FEDERATION
PRESIDENT
Dan Herman
M.D./Ph.D., Durham
I* s never too early to start
apples thinking aSout t ,
suiutuerf
Earn course credit while you work this summer through the
APPLES summer internship program.
interest Meeting:
Thursday, January 22, 5-6 pm
Old Student Union 226
Applications available at the APPLES office
and on-line at www.unc.edu/apples/internships
Deadline January 31.
Suite 108, Carolina Student Union * CB# 5210 * Chapel Hill, NC 27599-5210
__(91^) > 962^0902 i^919)J543-968£faxi^ww; unc ; edu/aj3j3les^^p£les@uncedu
TUESDAY AND
* WEDNESDAY EVENINGS
FROM 6 TO 9 PM
AT SECOND FLOOR OF DEY HALL
Beginning January 21,2003
Peer tutors available on a drop-in basis
first come, first served-to help in the following courses:
Tuesdays, 6-9 pm Wednesdays, 6-9 pm
French, Spanish, German French, Spanish, German
Math 10, 30, 31, 32 Latin, Arabic 101
Econ 10, Busi 24, 71 Math 10-81, Statistics
Stat 11,31 Busi 24, 71, Econ 10
Psyc 10, Poli 41 Psyc 10, Poli 41
Biology, Chemistry Biology, Chemistry
Phil 21, 22, etc. Geology 11, Astr 31
For additional help in physics, chemistry and math,
try these free resources:
The Math Help Center
224 Phillips
3:30-7:3opm M-Th
The Chemistry Resource Center
225 Venable Hall
12:00-7:00pm M-Th
The Physics Tutorial Center
210 Phillips
Bam-6pm M-F (as tutors are available)
See schedule on door for Phys 20, 24, 25, 26, 27
Questions? Call 962-3782
Sponsored by the Peer Tutoring Program
and UNC Learning Center
From Page One
HOUSING
From Page 1
instead of going to students, affordable
units would go to families that need them.
“It is my understanding that the ban
on duplexes came from ... when you get
three or four students living in both
sides of a unit and that can create prob
lems,” Dowling said.
Council member Mark Kleinschmidt
said putting duplexes under the land
trust would encourage owners to occu
py, not rent out, the units.
Kleinschmidt said the need for afford
able housing in Orange County means the
town must offer diverse housing options.
Council members agreed with
Dowling that some developers would
prefer affordable duplexes to small
affordable homes.
The council has mandated that any
new development provide 15 percent of
'new units for affordable housing or 25
percent of new units with less than
SENATORS
From Page 1
logical set of baggage.”
Ending the N.C. judiciary stalemate
would benefit the state, said Ferrel
Guillory, director of UNC’s Program on
Southern Politics, Media and Public
Life. “A lot of judges and lawyers with
businesses would like to have a North
Carolina judge who knows the state.”
But Guillory also said it is too soon to
tell if the two senators will be able to
overcome party barriers.
“Both feel partisan pressure to be party
loyalist,” he said. “Edwards is running for
president, while Dole campaigned as a
support for President Bush. There is nat
ural party tension between them.”
The two senators are going to support
different kinds of judges, Guillory said.
But Dole spokeswoman Mary Brown
Brewer said Dole has reached out to
UNEMPLOYMENT
From Page 1
will not be content with any unemploy
ment.
But those without jobs say they would
prefer actions more than words and goals.
Mock said 6.1 percent unemployment
“doesn’t sound like a lot, but if it’s you,
it’s 100 percent for you,” Mock said.
Since June 1, Mock has applied for
mm.
“Studying Abroad Can Change hr Life”
Come and find out about
UNC Year at
Montpellier (France)
Programs
Academic Year / Fall Semester
Spring Semester / Summer Session
Informational Meeting
Date: Wednesday, January 15,2003
Time: 3:00-5:00pm
Place: Toy Lounge, Dey Hall
UNC-Chapel Hill
yJmtdhmmvAformer participants,
For directions call (919) 962-0154
web: http://www. unc. edu/depts/mont
email: mont@unc.edu
35,000 square feet. But, Dowling said,
these options are not financially viable
for developments with fewer homes.
Also, Dowling said, these options
make affordable housing units in new
developments out of place.
Carrboro’s similar small-house pro
vision also has not had much success,
Board of Aldermen members said.
Another affordable housing option
recently presented to the council is the
possibility of allowing accessory apart
ments attached to larger houses.
Dowling conceded that the accessory
apartments address a legitimate concern
of the lack of affordable renting but wor
ried that, without the land trust, they
would not remain affordable.
Ward said the accessory apartment
and duplex options could be better
affordable housing tools because they
would effectively ensure affordable
housing in affluent neighborhoods.
The City Editor can be reached
at citydesk@unc.edu.
Edwards to encourage teamwork.
“(Their) staffs have had a couple of
discussions,” she said. “Dole went to
(Edwards’) office and talked about how
they would work together. She’s look
ing forward to meeting (with) her col
league and moving the process along.”
Edwards spokesman Mike Briggs
said Edwards is hopeful his and Dole’s
combined efforts will be more produc
tive than in the past. “Helms and
Edwards were able to work together on
many things but had different view
points on judicial vacancies,” he said.
“Senator Edwards has reached out to
Dole like he did Helms. He is optimistic
to work together with Dole and bring
constructive results for the state of North
Carolina. They will probably have dif
ferences, but where they can come
together, they will.”
The State & National Editor can be
reached atstntdesk@unc.edu.
more than 200 jobs and received no
interviews for the first four months.
She said she only survived because
she drew on her health insurance, which
was exhausted last month. “Today there
is only one thing keeping me from cry
ing. There is one job that it looks like I
can do at N.C. State (University). ...
Otherwise I might as well give up.”
The State & National Editor can be
reached at stntdesk@unc.edu.
JURISDICTION
From Page 1
investigations in the city where evidence
or property is located," McCracken said.
Before the territorial jurisdiction
expansion agreement was reached,
University police officers had to be
escorted by a Chapel Hill police officer
while conducting business off campus.
“It is a more efficient system, and it
saves us time from having to call an offi
cer from the city and then have to wait
for them to come and meet us,”
McCracken said.
Chapel Hill police spokeswoman
Jane Cousins said the department is
pleased with how the agreement has
worked so far.
Town police have had no problems
with University police conducting busi
ness in the town, Cousins said.
When the agreement was considered
last spring, several council members
were concerned University police might
overextend themselves into activities
reserved only for Chapel Hill police,
specifically traffic enforcement
McCracken said this has not been an
issue because University police are only
allowed to enforce traffic rules on roads
that border University property, as was
the case before the agreement was made.
He also said University police still
notify Chapel Hill police out of courtesy
when they need to exercise the extend
ed jurisdiction.
Council members also were con
cerned with how residents would react
to a “foreign” police force working in
the town.
But McCracken said University police
have gone to great lengths to ensure that
Vl►
Burch Field Research Seminars and
Honors Study Abroad
Information Fair
Friday, January 17
11-2 pm
in Graham Memorial
room 39
Exciting programs in London,
Berlin, Vienna, Beijing, Chile, Dijon,
Cape Town, Sydney, Rome, the Sierras,
Washington DC, and New York City
For more info, contact Dr. Ross Lewin, Director
of Burch Programs and Honors Study Abroad,
rlewin@email.unc.edu, or Study Abroad abroad@unc.edu
visit our website: www.unc.edu/depts/honors
I Study Abroad
Information Fair
TODAY
Room 1505 New Student Union
11:30am-3:30pm
Talk with program representatives!
Chat with study abroad returnees!
Get your questions answered!
&
Learn how you can study abroad for
UNC-CH tuition costs
and earn UNC-CH academic credit!
The Study Abroad Office
| 201 Porthole Building (next to the Hanes Art Center)
962-7002
http//studyabroad .unc .edu
Wednesday, January 15, 2003
hawused
1. Sept 18 attempt to save
arrest warrant papers
at magistrate's
2. Sept 26 foHow-up on
investigation on 814
Airport Road
3. Oct. 1 follow-up on
investigation on Trinity
Court Apartments
4. Oct. 10 follow-up on
investigation at
Martin Luther King
Boulevard
5. Oct 22 attempt to serve
arrest warrant papers
at Cametot Apartments
SOURCE. UNC POUCE DTH'STAU
residents are comfortable with University
police officers working in the town.
When dealing with people in the
town, University police officers must
fully identify themselves, say they work
for the University, state their purpose in
being off campus and point out that
they are working under expanded juris
diction.
“We wouldn’t want any confusion
about who the officer has worked for,”
McCracken said.
Although Carrboro is not included in
the extended jurisdiction agreement,
McCracken said University police
might try to involve Carrboro in a sim
ilar partnership in the future.
The City Editor can be reached
at citydesk@unc.edu.
9