Friday. January 30, 1931 The Daily Tar Heel3
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Dy KATIIEIHNE LONG
' Staff Writer
Four students have made plans to run for
Carolina Athletic Association president.
Harold Cooley, Chuck Gardiner, Jake
Kelly and Steve Theriot are candidates
for the office.
students could get to their next class on
time.
Jake Kelly, a junior economics major,
from Washington, D.C., said she would
establish seven committees to expand the
CAA's functions.
The committees would consist of a
budget and finance committee to set up
Dy MELODEE ALVES
- S!afT Wrilcr -
Both candidates for Residence Hall
Association president have decided to
concentrate their campaigning on elections
forums next week, with moderate door-to-door
visitations. They spent this week meeting
area residents.
Linda Howey, a junior business major from
Charlotte, said she spent, this week going to
various dormitory meetings and talking with
dorm officers.
"I've talked to people to see what RHA
means to them and what questions they have
about RHA," she said. "I've also tried to
answer questions about myself and my
campaign."
Howey said she would go ' door to door
beginning this weekend to answer questions
and to meet campus residents, but she said she .
would stress her campaign platform at the area
elections forums next week. She said her main
issue would be to stress student representation
in RHA.. Her other platform issues include
improving RHA officers contact with dorm
presidents, updating RHA files by improving
its resources, strengthening workshop training
for residence officers and discussing campus
security.
Howey's opponent, Robert Bianchi, a
junior math major from Vineland, N.J.,
concentrated his campaign this past week on
speaking at dorm meetings and with dorm
governors.
"I've learned a lot from residents asking
questions and expressing their opinions about
RHA," he said. "This exposure overall is very
positive."
Bianchi's campaign strategy for next week
will include random dorm visitations along
with attending area elections forums. Issues he
will discuss at the forums will be a joint
committee with Student Government, a
roommate bill of rights, a special projects
committee for an RHA reference service and
more press coverage for RHA and dorm
events.
Both candidates said they would probably
interrupt their door-to-door' visitations
Tuesday because of the Carolina-Virginia
basketball game. "If a candidate came up to
me while I was watching the game, I wouldn't
really care what they said," Howey said.
Bi3nchi
I've already been by the athletic fund-raising events; a promotion com-
CGC representatives
Howey
office, the intramural sports department
and the ticket office and discussed prob
lems," Harold Cooley, a junior political
science major from Alexandria, Va.,
said. '
"I feel like the main responsibility of
this office is to coordinate things," he
mittee to inform students about athletic
events; a publicity committee to work
with The Daily Tar Heel; a committee to
work on homecoming events year-round;
a special events committee; a varsity and
junior varsity sports committee; and a
clubs and intramurals committee to serve
as liaison between students and the athletic
Uour more enter competition for district position
i?3 n
1 wi
accounting
said. A member of the Union Social
Committee for two years, Cooley said department.
this experience, and three years on the Steve Theriot, a senior
varsity swim team and club sports, gave major from Greensboro, said he would
him both administrative and practical establish four CAA positions ticket
experience in sports. . distribution coordinator, special events
Chuck Gardiner, a junior chemistry "coordinator, publicity chairperson and
and political science major from Man- Daily Tar Heel liaison officer.
Chester, Mass., said he would work to
improve ticket distribution and the intra
murals program.
Gardiner said he would like to see bloc
tickets handed out in order, so people in
groups could sit together. He said he
would improve the token system, so that
only members of a group could get tic
kets reserved for that group's bloc.
Check-in time for basketball tickets
would be pushed back to ten minutes
before the hour, Gardiner said. This way
' -Theriot said the creation of these
positions would free him from minor
chores so he could become involved with
the athletic department's long-range
planning. ,
Theriot said he would start with a
small staff and gradually expand the
committees. "You can't go from a one
man office to a 20-man office in one
step," Theriot said. "Those areas have
to be cultivated - it has to be a building
process."
By FRANCES SILVA
Staff Writer
Four students announced their
candidacy for the Campus Governing
Council Wednesday.
Cheryl Bell, a sophomore speech
communications major from Selma, is
running for one of the three District 15
positions.
"1 wanted to get involved and I was
tired of hearing the alphabet CGC and
not knowing about it; I'm not the type
of person who can sit around for long,"
she said. , '
"1. want to make people in my district
more aware of what CGC does," she
- said.
Bell is a Black Student Movement
member and a member of the James
Aetion Committee.
Richard Cornelius, a sophomore
economics major from. Winston-Salem, -is
running for District jl.
"I feel "that since the council uses
student fees, that we need good student
representation, and I'd like to keep my
district informed," Cornelius said.
He plans to study the feasibility of,
making Chapel Thrill a permanent
concert.
"It could be made to make money if it
were run a little tighter. Even if it didn't,
we should still have it, "because the
students enjoy it," he said.
Cornelius is on the Everett dormitory
executive and enhancement committees.
; He is also a hall senator.
I - Grace Emerson, a sophomore religion
and economics major from Siler City, is
running for re-election in District II.
"I've been working on reforms in the
budget process all year and I'd like to see
them'carred through," she said.
The reforms deal with the process
through which the budget is allotted.
. Emerson was also . the CGC
representative to the Media Board. She
is on the Budget Review Committee, the
Campus Y and the Council on
Undergraduate Education. She was also
in the Minority Adviser program and is a
member of the varsity track team.
Donald Munro, a junior economics,
Latin American studies major from Sao
Paulo, Brazil, is running for District 20.
"I live off campus and I feel that off
campus students are not as easily
involved in activities," Munro said.
.. t
"As a foreign student I feel that I can
analyse the University from a different
perspective,"' he said.
Munro is a British Morehead Scholar.
inmoFcaiidicllates lavor ci
.ill
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Andy' Markov declares for GPSF 'presidency
By MELODEE ALVES
Staff Writer
worried that someone might decide to
run who would not represent the
progressive issues of campus," he said.
If elected GPSF president, Harkov
said he would work to improve
working conditions between
undergraduates and graduates on the
Campus Governing Council.
"It's important that graduates and
undergraduates work ' together.' The
Andy Harkov, a second-year law
student from Jerico, N.Y., announced
his candidacy yesterday for Graduate
and Professional Student Federation
president.
Harkov said that he would represent
the progressive voice of graduate
students in Student Government. "I GGacknowkdges-the- needs -of -saw
that no one was running and I was graduate students, but I'm not sure
twurww
they want to meet those needs," he
said.
Harkov said he supported last year's
graduate student fee referendum and if
elected, he said he would continue to
see that graduates maintained some
control of their money.
Harkov's past experience in Student
Government, includes executive vice
president . of. the- State University in
New York -at ; Binghamton, chairman
of the student" assemblyahd overseer
of student organizations.
By WILLIAM PESCHEL
" Staff Writer
Each of the candidate pairs for senior class president and
vice president agreed that the office should have a written
constitution.
But, the resemblance in their platforms ends there.
During the campaign leading to the Feb. 10 election, the
teams' Joey Hoyle and Bill Carlton, John Goodwin and Carol
Zielinski, and Brenny Thompson and Debbie Mixon have
proposed a variety of projects for the senior class.
Thompson and Mixon, who were endorsed by the Black
Student Movement, said they were investigating the possibility
nf iiH orarliiAtinn rnhp. Thpv said thev also favored
improving UNC's job interview system, possibly by increasing " especially for accounting and business majors,
the number of comrjanies that recruit on camnus. At the BSM business major, said.
forum, they promised the organization representation on a
senior class executive -council.
Goodwin and Zielinski said they would have graduate
students advise seniors about graduate school. In addition,
they said they favored setting up a permanent fund so that
each senior class would have "seed money" at the beginning
of the year. Also, they said they would try to get an office in
the Carolina Union with a telephone hotline.
Hoyle and Carlton have promised they would begin
programming this year and extend Senior Panic Week by
offering seminars throughout the year. They said they also
would form several committees on graduation and Senior
Search Week, and increase alumni donations for graduations.
They said they would expand graduation ceremonies in the
summer and fall. "We need to increase involvement in thatk
Hoyle, ai
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