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OTH/EUSE HARWOOD
Members of Student Action for
Workers sit inside South Building
to urge Chancellor James Moeser
to adopt a sweatshop-free policy.
SAW
FROM PAGE 3
zen and a proud supporter of the
UNC system," Local said.
As the protest continues, the
students on campus are still piec
ing together their thoughts about
it.
The only way to guarantee your
clothes are not made in sweatshops
is to make them yourself," sopho
more Brittany Price said. “Grow
your own cotton, raise your own
sheep."
Contact the University Editor
at udeskfa unc.edu.
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avant-garde poetry
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A panel discussion to open the exhibit
The Beats and Beyond: Counterculture Poetry, 1950-1975
WEDNESDAY
April 23 at 6 p.m.
BILL MORGAN
moderator
author, arctwisf*.
' col,ec * or IF -
M ED SANDSB-^H^**
poe? and rmnjdem
'*%.. .it® poet one Distinguished
Professor a* Writing and
Poetic' a* '■ iropo
"T< -"v , - University
ROBERT CANTWELL ,
professor of American
Tgj Studies aUhe University
g 1 of Nortn Carolina at
KggraS Chape Hit
HffS&i I Ij \
Pleasants Family Assembly Room. Wilson Übraiy
University of North Carolina ctt Chapel HBI
Free and open to the pubfic
Books will be available for sale and signing of the event
Program Information: Szajerß@unc.edu or 919-962-4207
Ed Sanders and Anne Woktman wM read bom the*
work on April 22 at 3:30 p.m. In the Bull's Head Bookshop
on the UNC campus
Reading information: 919-962-5060
The Beats and Beyond will be on view through July 3
I . i UNC_..
•ft —‘''rrtiwnpr'T —“*' Was nsta t im*
ELECTIONS
FROM PAGE 3
UNC-Chapel Hill experienced its
! own disruption in February 2004,
| when student body president can
l didate Lily West was accused of
| employing her boyfriend in inappro
priate canvassing in the last minutes
of a very close election runoff.
The BOE heard of the possible
violation minutes before results
were announced, forcing the board
to nullify the results and hold a
hearing. West was allowed to run in
the re-election, but her campaign
funds were reduced to a penny.
The other candidate, Matt
Calabria, won the re-election.
Jim Brewer, former chairman of
the board of elections at UNC-CH,
said there is a way to prevent such
incidents.
“I think it begins with clear elec
tion laws," he said, adding that the
| complexity of the laws themselves
might deter more frivolous candi
dates from running.
Todd Delp, assistant dean of
students at UNC-Charlotte. echoed
the need for detailed plans outlin
ing how to handle any situation.
“1 think it is crucial to have those
processes in place," he said.
UNC-C Student Body President
Justin Ritchie said candidates often
consider challenging an election
when it doesn't turn in their favor.
“Someone considered challenging
it this year, and 1 just had to sit him
I down and say, ‘What do you have to
gain?” He added that election results
From Page Three
are rarely overturned and that what
candidates haw to lose by challeng
ing results is actually more impor
tant: integrity and respect.
The one problem UNC-C did
have with its elections this year
was with technology. Because of
a technological error, no votes in
the Health and Human Services
College were counted, forcing the
campus to hold re-election.
Greg Doucette, president of the
senate at N.C. State University
and Association of Student
Governments president, said he
thought it was important for all the
schools to meet up and exchange
ideas for how to run governments.
‘I think the main thing is making
sure every school knows what every
school is up to." he said, adding that
he would like to see another state
wide ASG conference like the one
held two years ago.
Doucette said he hoped that
such an event would allow differ
ent university governments to learn
from each other while still catering
to their particular institution.
Contact the State Sational
Editor at stntdexkfa unc.edu.
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Celebrate Earth Day
at Carolina
with special guest speaker
David Orr
of Oberlin College
Come hear his special Earth Day talk:
"Some Like it Hot, but Lots
More Don't: The Changing
Climate of U.S. Politics"
7:30 p.m.
April 22
Carroll Hall Auditorium
Free to the public
II UNC
4U + INSTITUTE FOR
I THE ENVIRONMENT
For more information, visit ie.unc.edu
Sponsored by the UNC Institute
k\ for the Environment WA m
TICKETS
FROM RAGE 3
fan," said junior Jon Latanc. who
was a freshman during the last war
of that system.
The policy, which was discon
tinued because of student efforts
to bypass the system, required
students to pick up a bracelet and
then line up early for tickets the
morning of game day depending
on their assigned number.
"1 think that the big advantage of
the former system is that it was so
systematic," junior Doug Branson
said, adding that it is difficult to
remember the cutoff dates for the
online lottery.
The basketball ticket policy has
a history of transformation, from a
camp-out system to the bracelet sys
tem and then the online lottery.
Gwaltney said he hopes to return
to awarding students one ticket to
create more winners and reduce the
number of tickets that arc forgone.
He also said students in the standby
line might be let in during tipoff.
Contact the University Editor
at udesk(a unc.edu.
MONDAY. APRIL 21, 2008
CLEF HANGERS
FROM PAGE 3
quartet songs, 1950s doo-wop
tunes and spirituals, borrowed
from Saunders' high school group
and other colleges, Saunders
said.
It wasn't until the 1990s that the
Clefs made the full transition to
pop music, said Anoop Desai, the
group's current president.
“We were one of the first groups
to make that transition in the late
19905," Desai said.
Today the Clefs arrange many of
their songs themselves.
“One of the things that's espe
cially difficult is figuring out what
syllables to sing," said Clef alumnus
Ned Malone.
“If you choose the wrong syl
lable. your song is going to end up
sounding very gooff."
But the group has managed to
overcome this obstacle, attracting
consistently sold-out crowds and
a growing popularity the group
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W4l Mon-Sor loam-9phn • Sun I2pm-6pm .
WEDNESDAY
BASEBALL vs. High Point
6 PM
FRIDAY
BASEBALL vs. Florida St.
7 PM
SATURDAY
BASEBALL vs. Florida St.
6 PM
SUNDAY
BASEBALL vs. Florida St.
IPM
Join us /ora Bake
Sale in Mainstreet
an April 22.
Carolina
PINING SERVICES
performed April 14 to a near full
house in Memorial Hall in addi
tion to Saturday's sold-out show.
Lauren Bristol, a freshman
who attended Monday's con
cert. said the group attracts a
large audience when it performs
at Granville Towers, where she
lives.
"All of a sudden girls are piled on
the elevator. Because (the Clefs) are
good-looking... and they sing real
ly well, and they sing good songs."
Bristol said.
Along with traditions such as
an East Coast college tour in the
fall and international trips almost
even spring, the Clefs sing at the
Old Well at the end of each semes
ter.
“To me they're what Carolina
is all about." said UNC-system
President Erskine Bowies, who
attended Monday’s concert. “They
bring out all the cohorts."
Contact the Arts Editor
ut urtsdexkfa une.edu.
7