Shr Daily ear Hrrl COMPUTER FROM RAGE 1 Stephanie Szakal. assistant vice chancellor for ERP. Student records In about two years, student records will begin operating with PcopleSoft for fail registration. New features that will come along with ERP include the ability' to look up class ranking, to use an enrollment shopping cart to register for classes and to enforce prerequi sites during registration. A real-time course search and the ability for professors to submit final grades online, instead of man ually entering them twice in paper, also will be available. The replacement of Blackboard was one of the possible changes, but its possible replacement has been put on hold until after phase two implementation is complete. Szakal said the majority of cur rent students will come in contact with ERP only when ordering tran scripts after fall 2010. Finances and advising Both financial aid and student financial records will be integrated into ERP during this phase. In March 2010. student aid will begin to be packaged for the fall, using the new system. T\vo months later, billing for that semester will be added to People Soft, and UNC will start issuing eßills along with paper bills as a result of ERP. Academic advising will be the last sector to be updated during the phase because enrollment data will not be fully integrated to People Soft until October 2010. Academic requirements for all programs that are available through the automated degree audit will be configured and updated. Degree requirements will be vali dated so students can have a reliable degree audit system at hand. Student biographical and demo graphic data also will be converted. Admissions Admissions updates will be rolled out to accommodate deadlines for different UNC schools. The medicine and pharmacy schools' applications will be avail able using the software in June 2009 for fall 2010 applications. Graduate school applications will be available in July 2009, while undergraduate applications will go a Triangle Institute for Security Studies and the Global Education Center at UNC present Brzezinski former US National Security Advisor speaking on “Global Security Challenges” • at The Global Education Center UNC-Chapel Hill Campus March sth, 2008, 7:45 pm. Free to the public For more information visit: www.tiss-nc.org —i— New ERP features . ► Students can put classes in a shopping cart before enrollment ► Students can give a third party, such as parents, access to their information ► Professors will be able to submit student grades to the registrar's office online. ► UNC will send eßills in addition to paper bills ► Students can see their dass rank live that August These applications will give stu dent the first chance to come in contact with ERR “The first students to test this are not students; they will actually be applicants," Szakal said. The law and dental schools will use third-part) products, but admissions data will be integrated for financial aid purposes. After the second phase concludes. ERP will begin its third stage: updat ing human resources and financial services software at the University. The complete overhaul to replace the more than 20-year-old software will cost the University at least SIOO million. Contact the University Editor at udeskQ unc.edu. JUSTICE FROM RAGE 1 ber for Choice USA. "We are infor mational. not confrontational." Students suggested making radio ads. pressuring members of Congress and yvriting letters to neyvspapers. Ashley Tyndall, president of Students for Life of America, who did not attend the conference, said / % \ Chinese DINNER BUFFET j I *9.35 ! ! SI.OO OFF with your UNC student ID ! i J 35 Chinese has the best variety of Chinese food around. You can choose from over SO hems on our Super Buffet or order from the extensive menu. Lunch 11am 2:3opm Friday/Saturday Dinner 4:3opm-10pm Sunday-Thursday Dinner 4:3opm -9:3opm CLOSED MONDAY Umvtruty Square • 143 W. Franklin Street • Chapel Hill • 919.968.3488 • www citysearch.com/rdu/35 From Page One STREET VIEW FROM RAGE 1 But Anderson said she values her privacy more than driving con venience, adding that she is con cerned about the threat to security and safety - that Street View poses. “If that information got into the wTong hands, it could be bad," Anderson said. Eric Menhart, an attorney at CyberLaw, a Washington, D.C., Internet law firm, said concerns such as Anderson’s are common. “Google actually got a lot of flak about this last year because people were concerned with their privacy ," Menhart said. He said that for complaints such as those, Google, which holds offices in Chapel Hill’s Southern Village, added a feature in which one can request to have an image removed. Individuals can request to have an image taken off the site if the image contains inappropriate content, infringes on one’s privacy or presents personal security concerns. The company has not received many requests yet. Filadelfo said, but she added that Google routine ly reviews such requests and acts quickly to remove the imagery. Menhart said he doesn't think one would have any problems in getting an image removed. the vast majority of Crisis Pregnancy Centers do not misrepresent them selves. “It's really unfortunate that they’ve started this smear campaign." she said. Tyndall said her group held a sim ilar grassroots activism conference last January in Washington, D.C. Contact the State National Editor at stntdeskQ unc.edu. A screenshot of the Chapel Hill post office found through Google. “I suspect that if you had any type of valid complaint, it’s going to get removed." he said. Because the images were taken on public property. Menhart said Street View doesn't constitute an invasion of privacy, even though it creates privacy concerns for many. “The legal answer to this is if you are in public, you don’t really have any expectation of privacy," he said. But even though the images are months old, Menhart said it also is important to consider that a lot of people probably don't even know they’re part of Google Maps. Despite privacy concerns. Google is expanding Street View imagery to major metropolitans. Ultimately the company would like to have Street View imagery for regions through out the world, Filadelfo said. Menhart said that while such a project is legal. Google still should continue to address any ethical issues that might come up. “It's really an issue of legality ver sus what's right and appropriate." Contact the City Editor at citydexkfa unc.edu. New Kose: Ongoing effecte of Hurricane Katrina CUAB presents an evening with mmmmsem tl 1 he Pulitzer Prize nominated Timed-Picayune columnist and author of / Dead in the Attic will discuss the ongoing cultural effects of 1 lurricane Kan ina on the Gulf Coast Come prepared with questions about cultural writing, New Orleans now and two years ago and a sense ol humor March 5, 6:00 PM 121 Hanes Art Center free and open to the public .r.nivilk' I v ucvu uncxdu B ;■ I'V -U k-l\ HOIKS: Answers to quick career questions and resume reviews—M-l . 10:30am-?:30pni^H j§L ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS ’ ~fg m Ihe employers listed below will be conducting on-campus interviews or collecting resumes. If you are ■**, H interested, please submit your resume in our online system by the deadline date listed. fl J Avondale Partners. LLC Investment Banking Analyst Intern (Resume Collection Only) (deadline 3/7/08) I t GEICO Summer Internship Program (deadline 3/6/08) I Abercrombie & Fitch Cos.: Manager in Training (deadline 3/6/08) I ALDI Foods Distnct Manager (deadline 3/6/08) I Brooksource Account Executive (deadline 3/6/08) | Enterprise Rent-A-Car Full Time Sales Management Trainee (deadline 3/6/08) ! I Environment North Carolina: Environmental Fellowship (Open sign up) (deadline March 3 for interviews Ii I on March 5) (deadline March 26 for interviews on March 28) |I GEICO: Auto Damage Adjuster, Auto Damage Fast Track. Emerging Leaders Program information Tech ]■ nology Track Emerging Leaders Program Operations Management Track Process Analyst Product Man- ■■ II agement Analyst Sales Representative Supervisory Leadership Program Telephone Claims Represents live (deadline 3/6/08) I The Fresh Market Business Strategy Analyst (deadline 3/13/08) §§ us Census Bureau Cartographer Geographer Information Technology Specialist Mathematical Statisti- K m cian. Statistician/Analyst (deadline 3/6/08) B | PRESENTATIONS ___j 1 BB Environment North Carolina Environmental Fellowship 3/4/08 6:3opm. 116 Murphey Hall Open to all (H students and alumni Business Casual Dress :|| ■E& J Gallo Winery Management Development Program 3/5/08. 6.30 pm 103 Bingham Hall Open to ■ all students and alumni Business Casual Dress Jr I WORKSHOPS | 1 I Teaching English Abroad: 3/3/08 400 pm 3203 Carolina Union I | 'Career Clinic: 3/4/08 4 00pm Seminar Room Campus Y UCST I I How to Find a Summer Job Abroad 3/5/08 4 00pm, 2510 Carolina Union ■ I 'Using UCS for Your Internship Search 3/6/08 4 00pm 3209 Carolina Union | l SAVE.THE PATE j I Education Job Fair: 3/18/08, 0:00am- 12:00pm, Great Hall, C arolina Union J§ Spring Job Fair: 3/26/08, 1:00pm-4:30pm. Great Hall. Carolina Union # PREPARE YOUR RESUMES! ■B Development Certificate B For mure information on tkese on-camaits immviews amd ev#ati *isit )uijar//r* r ~ m ffl jjff | ( J FS at careers, unc. edu p MONDAY, MARCH 3, 2008 DANCE FROM PAGE 1 The dancers seemed to share a sort of collective consciousness rooted in Odissi's mythos, moving in perfect harmony with one anoth er in what an unfamiliar observer might describe as a mix of ballet, pantomime and tai chi. Often during the performance, dancers would begin a piece frozen in tableau. Through slow, meticu lous movements, dancers would begin to thaw, evoking an image of ancient temple statues instilled with life by the music's sacred passion. The dancers’ sensually writhing hips and serpentine neck move ments added an element of latent sexuality to the performance, reflecting the subject matter of romantic desire. The lighting visually under scored the mood being set forth through music; slow introductory musical phrases were matched with almost imperceptibly dim trickles of light. And as the tempo and mood escalated, dancers were slowly drenched with brilliant shades of rose, orange and azure. Beats from the mridangam, a tra ditional Indian drum, established velocity, but occasionally ceased in submission to the authoritative bare foot stomps of the dancers. “(The dance is) a highly stylized and highly cohesive language. The vocabulary is handed down through generations." Sen said. “It is like an alphabet we have, and we have to use it to tell our own stories." Contact the Arts Editor at artsdeskQ unc.edu. GONZALEZ SHOW FROM RAGE 1 guitar rhythms, was subsequently released in the United States in 2005. Gonzalez's music has been fea tured on television shows such as “One Tree Hill" and “Scrubs." Senior Jose Estrada said he has exhausted his copy of “Veneer." “You can feel his Spanish back ground come through in his voice, not just that he’s Swedish," Estrada said. “I watched a live concert online and can’t wait to see him up close." Gonzalez is on tour to promote the release ofhis second album. “In Our Nature," which was released last year. “I haven't really listened to it. so I’ll have to pick it up before the show," Estrada said. “But I'm sure I won’t be disappointed." Singer/songwriter Mia Doi Todd will open for Gonzalez at today's show. A Yale University alumna. Todd also classifies her music as folk rock. But the Singer says it could be more accurately described a melodramatic soul. “She has such a harmonic, hyp notic voice," Allin said. “I imagine they’ll complement each other very w - ell." CUAB paid 55.000 to bring the artists —a fair price for such a cul tured performance. Allin said. “(Gonzalez) has his audience," he said. “But I hope that people w'ho haven’t heard of him before will really take advantage." Contact the Arts Editor at arts (a um.edu. 5