4 MONDAY, MARCH 3. 2008 SOCIAL JUSTICE FROM PAGE 3 Sophomore Sara Bossert said this was her favorite part of the tour, adding that her interest in Latino culture evoked sensitivity toward the farmers. “I wish there was more time to go into detail about it." she said. Senior Sarah Schuyler, co-presi dent of the Campus V’ and a coordi nator for the tour, said she was over whelmed by student responses. 5 The best coffee in town and breakfast pastries fresh • from the oven... duyat/ancf 0 HAPPIEST i place on Earth! \ Sugarland Bakery \ 140 E. Franklin Bring in this od for 50 cents off your morning coffee! Good from 8 *ll 0.m. ( Monday-Friday Open 8 a.m. -midnight wwwjagsrMiiapohill.com mmm Carolina Sports TUESDAY BASEBALL vs. William & Mary 3:3opm SOFTBALL vs. South Carolina 4:oopm FRIDAY SOFTBALL vs. JMU 12:30pm SOFTBALL vs. USC Upstate 3:oopm SATURDAY ROWING vs. Alabama - 9:ooam W. TENNIS vs. Maryland 11:00am W. LACROSSE vs. Vanderbilt 12:00pm SOFTBALL vs. Lafayette 12:30pm SOFTBALL vs. Princeton 3:oopm M. LACROSSE vs. Notre Dame 3:3opm TRACK & FIELD - USATF Combined - All Day SUNDAY W. TENNIS vs. Boston College 1:00pm SOFTBALL - Tar Heel Invitational Finals - All Day TRACK & FIELD - USATF Combined - All Day Join us for the first spring Seafood Fleet during dinner on Afarch 4th at both dining halls! Carolina DINING SERVICES “From the beginning. 1 was won dering if we were going to be able to get a bus full of people. Not only did we get a response, but we filled to capacity." Schuyler said. Some participants from this year's Social Justice Tour said they want to have another tour next year. “I had participants coming and telling me we should do this every semester," Schuyler said. Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu. From Page Three BUDGET FROM PAGE 3 Congress considered the group's impact on the student body when deciding how to allocate money . “It’s still less than we were given last year, but there’s only so much money to go around," Moss said. “But Congress saw how prepared and passionate we were, and we’re very grateful for the funds that we were appropriated* The $364,000 doled out this spring represents only 80 percent of the total Congress budget. The other 20 percent will be available for further appropriations begin ning in the fall. “We had to cut everyone," Speaker TVler Younts said. “We ■>■ll I ■ ■ ■ Cfuh ffova Thrift Shop j Clothing, Books SC Music, House SC Kitchen, Gifts j Buy one item of dothing, get one item of equal or lesser value free with this ad! I S O"® coupon per customer - SIO maximum value I lUzftin Tun-fri K) am 4fm • Sat X) am-4 ret mWjt/ (919) 967-6985 • 103 C VfcM Main Street. 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Younts said those groups had until Sunday night to contact Congress and schedule anew meeting oth erwise, they receive no money from Congress. “If there's money left over, then we’ll add that to the 20 percent and give it to someone who needs it next fall," Younts said. Contact the University Editor at udesk@ unc.edu. GREENSBORO 4 FROM PAGE 3 He told students how he and his friends were inspired to start the sit-ins and how their small act received national attention and participation in 1960. Students did research to pre pare for the question-and-answer period. They asked if McCain ever felt “revengous," if he ever tried to drink out of a whites-only water fountain, if he ever got hungry when he wasn't served and if he was afraid of the bomb threats Woolworth received one of the days of the sit-in. "Did you know before the sit-in if they were going to serve you?" one student asked. “I knew I was going to win" McCain answered. “The only thing HOURS FROM PAGE 3 work on that." He said CWS has two open clini cal positions that officials hope to fill with people of color. The idea for drop-in hours for students of color came from a diversity committee within CWS that looks for ways to better serve the variety of students at UNC, O’Barr said. "It was a staff decision to try to reach out to students that we thought Slip Daily Oar Uprf I didn’t know was when." Fourth-grader Yuma Kobayashi said he enjoyed hearing McCain. “If I see somebody saying some body can’t do something, I can tell them to stop," Kobayashi said. The civil rights movement is still in progress today, McCain said. He said he looks at the issues on a local basis now. He is involved with registering voters, mentoring students and working to establish equality in education. “I pick my fights more," McCain said. They are more strategic." He said that he enjoys speaking to the younger generation and that they surprise him with their enthusiasm. “1 won’t miss the opportunity to talk to them," McCain said. ‘This is my shot." Contact the City Editor at citydesk@unc.edu. might be underserved," he said. Specific drop-in hours for les bian, gay. bisexual, transgender or queer students also were created about six years ago and have been widely used, O’Barr said. Although the number of students of color served by CWS already is about proportional to the campus population, O’Barr said the staff wanted students to be as comfort able as possible. Contact the University Editor at udesk@ unc.edu.