6 TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 2008 PRIMARY FROM PAGE 1 Friday night updated rock classics to include the Huckabee brand turning a line from the Simon and Garth tike 1 hit “Mrs. Robinson" into: “Here’s to you, Mr. Huckabee, Jesus loves vou more than you will know.* Meanwhile the crowd waved signs reading. “I like Mike." a throw back to Dwight "Ike" Eisenhowers 1.952 presidential campaign. After his speech, Huckabee grabbed a bass guitar, and joined the band for a rousing rendition of “Sweet Home Alabama." At McCains celebration Saturday night, hits from the baby boomer generation played in the background. McCain strode on stage to the straias of the Rocky theme song. His supporters, who were instruct - ed not to block the sightline of the national media cameras with their campaign signs, greeted McCain with chants of “Mac is Back." A personal connection Kelly Blynn, a New Hampshire resident, came down to South Carolina to see what the Republican candidates had to say about her pet issue, global w arming. At Huckabees rally Friday night. Blynn said Huckabee and McCain are the only Republicans addressing the issue. “Their stance polieywise is fairly similar... but they come at it front very different angles." She said that Huckabee views fighting global warming as part of a faith-based, stewardship of the Earth platform whereas McCain approach es the issue more pragmatically. Blynn said McCain has been a leader on the issue, acknowledging climate change advocates at earlier rallies. “It's cool to see that he actu ally listens to voters." London Snipes, 15-year-old Miss Greenwood Teen of South Carolina, said that she used to be a supporter of Fred Thompson but that Huckabees stance on environ mental issues swayed her. “I liked his clean air campaign,” she said. “He’s the only one actually addressing the issue of air." Tyler Smith, a Mercer University student in South Carolina for a political science class, said he thinks the candidates often have personal appeal beyond the issues. “I’ve talked to a lot of girls with Romney, I think it’s the way he looks." Smith said. P (■r~.invilk‘l ucvVJiinc.edu J careeiN.iiiH'.edti I • *•""■* ''■ B 1 I AI.K-IN lit >1 RS: Answers to quick career questions and resume reviews M-l. I():30am-3:30pm I P ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS 111 1 1 Ihe employers listed below will be conducting on-campus interviews or collecting resumes. II you are H {■ interested, please submit your resume in our online system by the deadline date listed U 0 2) Internships Accenture Consulting Analyst Internship (deadline 2/12/08) Jg Bain & Company Associate Consultant Intern (Resume Collection Only) (deadline 1/31/08) Capital One: Finance Internship Program (Resume Collection Only) (deadline 1/31/08) T3 Carmax Strategy Analyst Internship (deadline 1/29/08) BJ Citi: Investment Banking Summer Analyst Program (Resume Collection Only) (deadline 1/23/08) CO ;wing Bemiss & Cos. (Investment Banking): 1-Banking Intern (Resume Collection Only) (deadline 2/3/08) SP General Electric-GE Financial Management Program Intern (FMP Intern) (deadline 1/24/08) H| Norfolk Southern Corporation Coop/lntem Program (deadline 1/31/08) H Pepsi-Cola North America Pepsi Sales Internship (deadline 1/24/08) ■ Raymond James & Associates (Investment Banking): Investment Banking Summer Analyst (deadline il 1/23/08) 1 I Full-Time K Bilkent University School of English Language Communication Skills Instructor (deadline 1/24/08) t K Capital One: Business Analyst Development Program (Resume Collection Only) (deadline 1/31/08) ■ Carmax Strategy Analyst (deadline 1/29/08) | Dell Inc. Consumer Inside Sales Agent (deadline 2/7/08) ■ Duke Management Company Investment Analysts (deadline 1/27/08) H| Georgetown Learning Centers Associate Director (deadline 2/7/08) E IBM: Details pending ■ Johnson & Johnson (Lifescan, Inc.): Sales Leadership Development Program (deadline 2/24/08) B Pepsi-Cola North America Sales Management Development Program (deadline 1/24/08) 2T; S Stockamp & Associates. Inc.: Associate Consultant (deadline 1/30/08) I Sun Life Financial (Group Insurance Division): Employee Benefits Sales Representative (deadline H 2/11/08) * K Wellpoint: Details pending 03 ■ IF PRESENTATION |9 Tj 1 Department of Stale: Information session 1 <221)8. 3:3l>pm-4:3opm. SASB. Upendo Kmim It IS. Open to all <* H students and alumni Business Casual Attire ffEi KM>N Suits A Sturkeunn Internship. Summer Internships. Production Assistant Trainee I’toy rum, Diaiiul Media It H leehnohiiY Internships - ( ontrni Business Area I 22 08. 7:oopm-9:oopm Open to Sophomores. Juniors and H| Seniors. Business Casual Attire. 3£ Neirnan Marcus Internships. 123 08. 6:3opm-7:3opm. 3501 Carolina Union. Open to students and alumni. II Business Casual Attire. II WORKSHOPS 11 I Using lICS for \ our Job Search: I/22/08, 4-spm. A iO2 Carolina Union I *( areer Clinic: I '23/08. 12-1 pm. Wilson Library-Pleasants Family Room I ‘Careers in Fashion and Retail Panel: I/23/08. 5-6 pm, 3501 Carolina Union I ‘Careers in Real Estate Panel: 1/24/08. 5-6 pm. 3501 Carolina Union Consulting 101 Workshop: 1/25/08. 2-3:3opm. 2518A Carolina Union I ‘Targeting Your Internship Search I '26/08, 10-3:3opm. 3411 Carolina Union j"\ I j - ——— —— j H ■lnternship Fair! This WEEK! | Wed., January 23, 2008 ~ 11:00 am-3:00 pm Great Hall, Student Union * Denotes programs that qualify for Career Development Certificate Program Visit \ ■ http //careers.unc.edu for more information if you are interested in this Program j For more information on these on-campus interviews anti events, || Register with UCS atcareers.unc.edu MnnrannnHHHHnnnnß hhbhhhhbhhhhhhhhi Strategic campaigning While the downtown headquar ters of McCain and Romney buzzed with activity Saturday morning. Rudy Giuliani's headquarters in West Columbia were noticeably quiet The official campaign staff had already gone down to Florida, leav ing only a few dedicated volunteers to man the phones and put out signs on primary day. ‘You don't realize how many precincts are in a county until you try to put up signs." finance director Eaddy Willard said after coming in from the rain. “Luckily they're waterproof," she added. Willard said Giuliani has more executive experience than most can didates because New York City's gov ernment is larger than most states'. Volunteer Tony Darmanin, son of one of Giuliani's former bodyguards, said Giuliani turned Manhattan into a place where people wanted to live again. “If a person can turn a dump into a paradise, what can he do for this country?" he asked. Giuliani finished sixth in South Carolina with 2 percent of the vote. Wjllard said that none of the candidates has unlimited resources and that Giuliani is fighting to win delegates across the country, espe cially in Florida. Mitt Romney also chose to pull resources from South Carolina instead focusing on Nevada, where he finished with 51 percent of the votes. 37 points ahead of the sec ond-place finisher Ron Paul. In South Carolina. Romney won 15 percent of the votes and finished fourth. Garrett Gay, a high school stu dent from Charleston and Romney campaign volunteer, said Romney began at a disadvantage, acknowl edging Saturday that his candidate wouldn't win in South Carolina. "His opponents are Baptist preachers and have Southern back grounds." he said. "And McCain's had two campaigns here, really." Saturday afternoon, Gay pre dicted that Romney will have a good shot in Florida and Maine. “He’s competitive across the country, not just in a few pick-and choose states," said Will Holley, Romney’s South Carolina press coordinator. Contact the State W National Editor at thtidetk@unc.edtL From Page One ISSUES FROM PAGE 1 “You've got to talk about this central issue." In the other camp, speakers at McCain's victory party Saturday night emphasized his ability to lead the American troops. “I think the people of South Carolina decided they want a commander in chief," said Bobby Harrell, speaker of the S.C. House of Representatives. McCain supporters waiting for results echoed that belief. “1 like that he’s a military man," said Jason Bull, a fresh man at Georgia College and State University. “He's a good, upstand ing Republican man.’ Bull added that he thinks McCain has good Christian values but doesn't tout them as aggressively as other candidates, which he thinks will help McCain in the election. “Even the people who aren’t Christian are okay with McCain being a Christian," Bull said. However, Huckabees strong Christian background appealed to many at his rally on Friday night. University of South Carolina freshman Ryan Rikesaid Huckabees faith was a big pull. “People in the South like people who are real." Rike added that Huckabees faith could detract from support among less religious voters. “The fact that he’s so real about his faith could hurt him with the secular people." Bill Cobey. N.C. chairman of the Huckabee campaign, said Huckabee s church experience helps him identify with all sectors of the population. “If you can be a pastor, you can do just about anything." McCain supporters also touted their candidate's authenticity. Neil Capano, a volunteer from McCain's New Hampshire office, talked about McCains “political courage" in a debate earlier this year where a woman whose son died in Iraq asked the Republican candi dates what they would do to make her son's sacrifice worthwhile. “John McCain stood up, walked up and looked her straight in the eye and said, ‘As president. I’ll do whatever I can to make sure that your son’s sacrifice was not in vain,” Capano recounted. State & National Editor Elizabeth DeOniellus contributed reporting. Contact her at stntdesk@ utic.edu. ARRESTS FROM PAGE 1 Brad Lockwood, another mascot and friend of Ray. “It’s a lot more infor mation to hang on to when we were just trying to find closure.' With the case still ongoing, Treadaway and Lockwood said it's making healing even harder. ‘Better late than never might be the best way to describe it," Treadaway said. “We haven’t been sitting here ... wanting to get back at people, we've just been trying to do best by doing what (Jason) told us to do." And Ray's story also has served as a lesson in saving lives. As an organ donor, Ray saved the lives of at least four people in the New Jersey area In October, ESPN aired' a seg ment about Ray’s life and his deci sion to become an organ donor. The show profiled the four people who received his organs. His parents are now advocates for organ donation and have spoken to UNC cheerleaders and other groups about becoming organ donors. Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu. FUNDING FROM PAGE 1 for infrastructure costs. The University plans to pay for four of the eight proposed buildings in the first five years by using state funds. Housing buildings and cen ters and institutes buildings should pay for themselves through rent paid by occupants, Evans said. Each of the other two five year segments also are supposed to include a mix of private and University buildings, meaning the project will entail UNC digging into its own pockets or the state's pockets continually for at least tire next 15 years. The plans and costs for the remaining 35 years are uncertain but are set to include more infra structure and building costs. “It's a long, expensive process to get it up and going," said Andy Willis, vice president of govern ment relations for the UNC system. “And it’s going to keep growing." Prioritizing its future The N.C. General Assembly gave the 17 UNC-system schools a total $615 million last year for capital projects, of which UNC received more than $l5O million. The money funded parts of The North Carolina premier of Bam 6.6 Tonight the UNC screening of the inspiring international documentary that remembers WHEN COMPASSION TRIUMPHED In 2003 an earthquake of 6.6 magnitude struck the city of Bam in Iran, killing and injuring tens of thousands of residents and two American tourists. The massive tremor destroyed nearly all of the beautiful ancient city of "Silk Road" fame. But it failed to shake the local tradition of hospitality to visitors. Relying on interviews that shatter common assumptions, the hour-long Bam 6.6 follows the experiences of Adele Freedman, a Jewish American woman who was vacationing in Bam with her fiance, Tobb Dell’Oro, when the earthquake struck. Adele, who had to face Tobb's tragic death alone halfway around the world, found unexpected comfort when the Iranians around her reached out to her spontaneously. Without narration, the film interweaves Adele's ordeal with the grief and open-mindedness of other survivors, emergency volunteers, medical professionals, and U.S. rescue and aid teams. Previous screenings have included the 2007 United Nations Film Festival and the Washington National Cathedral. Tonight at 7 pm in the Multipurpose Room UNC Stone Center, next to the Bell Tower Sponsored by the Middle East Student Forum For more information, contact (919) 357-4935 RUBY DEE FROM PAGE 1 ‘American Gangster' didn’t hurt," McMillan said of the committee selecting Dee. “That’s just a little more name recognition that she didn't have last year." Dee has been active in sev eral social justice organizations, such as the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The MLK celebration committee has been meeting every Tuesday since the beginning of the fall semester to plan all aspects of this week's MLK celebratory events, Blake said. After deliberations about other potential speakers, Blake said the committee narrowed down the list to the five most preferred speak ers. Dee, Elie Wiesel, Morris Dees, Myrlie Evers-Williams. and Martin Luther King 111 were the group's five finalists. McMillan said students on the committee requested a speaker UNC’s top two capital priorities the Genome Science Laboratory Building and the School of Dentistry. Carolina North was the third priority on the University's capi tal project list submitted to the General Assembly last year, with a request for $244 million. The proj ect received no money. “It was not funded in any form or fashion because there's just not enough money to do everything," Willis said, adding that no system school received money for more than its top two priorities. The capital priorities for this year will be established by the Board of Trustees on Thursday and then sub mitted to the Board of Governors by its meeting in March. "The No. 1 priority will probably be the dental school so they can fin ish it off" Willis said. “I’m assuming Carolina North will be No. 2.” Dwayne Pinkney, assistant vice chancellor for finance and admin istration at the University, would not comment on the list of priori ties before the BOT meeting. Even if Carolina North tops the priority list, funds from the state probably will take multiple years to come through, Willis said. “The legislature doesn’t just write checks for $250 million and say it’s done," Willis said. ahr Sally oar 3irrl “The fact that she ivas just in American Gangster' didn't hurt ” TIMOTHY MCMILLAN, professor. ON CHOKE OF RUBY DEE AS KEYNOTE SPEAKER FOR MARTIN LUTHER KING CELEBRATION who was part of the civil rights movement. “Students wanted to get some one from the legacy," he said. While active in the movement. Dee was a close friend of King's. Tickets to Dee’s speech are free but must be picked up in advance at the Memorial Hall Box Office. Former MLK celebration speak ers have included Cornel West and Nikki Giovanni in 2007 and 2006, respectively. Their speeches were attended by a full Memorial Hall. McMillan said, adding that he hopes that trend continues this year with Dee’s speech. “I hope it's a sell-out." Contact the lUniversity Editor at tulesk@unc.edu. “For large projects they'll give 10 percent for planning and then the next years we’ll come back and ask for more funds to finish it" The University has paid for most of its recent construction and building renovations from the $5lO million it received in 2000 from the state's higher education bond referendum, but that money has been spent “Every contract has been let now for those projects," Willis said. “There’s no more money in that." Building on a budget Investing millions of dollars into a research campus during the next 50 years could be difficult as UNC tries to remain competitive. State funds given for the University's capital expenditures are separate from operating funds, which are used to pay for expenses such as faculty salaries and build ing upkeep. Willis said. Although the two pools of money are not explicitly tied, the state has to keep to its overall budget “While the two aren’t one to-one, you don't want a capital request that absolutely overwhelms the senses," Pinkney said. Contact the Investigative Team Editor at iteam@unc.edu.

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