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Staff Writers
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announced their ccncL Jacy for Campus Govemlns Council
representatives. ! .
Lori Dostal, a third-year pharmacology student from
Midland, Mich., announced for CGC District 5. District 5
includes the schools of cinctomy, be
pational th
co'ogy
:al therapy, pathology, pharma-
erspy, pnyst
'I decided to run because we need to have graduate
f? . representation cn the student council," she said.
1' Dostal's past experience in government has included
being a representative in the Graduate and Professional
Student Federation.
Allen Graham, a first-year student in the MDA pro- i
' "The main reason I'm running is, the way CGC had
the district before, we were Included with Kenan, Melver
and parts of South Campus we were really getting
'shafted," he said. "And I really want to run to give
-South Campus input' into Student Government."
"A lot of things are dealing more or less with North
Campus. I'd just like to try to bring South Campus
' back into the mainstream of things," he said.
. Newman was social lieutenant governor of Enringhaus
and has worked with orientation.
Cindy Probst, a first-year student in the school of
public health-nursing is running for CGC District 7,
which represents the schools for ecology, geology,
pharmacy, public health and zoology.
"I'm interested in the graduate students and their
voice on campus," she said.
Probst has had no experience in government.
Jon Reckfcrd, a freshman from Chapel Hill, and
Nan Elackerby, a junior international relations and
political science major from New Bern, announced
their candidacies for CGC District 14 representative
gram, is running for CGC District 3, which consists of
the schools of botany, chemistry, marine science, math
and business administration.
"I decided to run so that we will have responsible
people, people who care about what's going on," he
said.
As an undergraduate here, Graham was the governor
of Henderson Residence College and housing chairperson
for the Student Consumer Action Union.
Forest Newman, a sophomore zoology major from
Charlotte, is running for District 12, which is Ehringhaus
and Craise. . .
Thursday. Reckford and Elackerby are running as a
team for the two seats representing the Granville Towers
district.
"We're running as a team so we can do a more effective
Job representing our constituents," Reckford said.
Reckford is interested in the Financial aspects of the
CGC and Elackerby is interested in student relations,
he said.
Elackerby worked on the executive committee of the
1930 Carolina Symposium and is a member of the
Campus Y and the UNC water ski club.
.. Reckford is a hall president in Granville Towers and
is a member of the UNC crew club and junior varsity g
soccer team.
Mike Nandenbergh, a scphcrr.cre zoclcgy and history
major from Raleigh, is running for District 23, which
has several fraternity houses in it.
He said he wanted to get stronger representation in
CGC. He said he would put up a report of what CGC
was doing once a month and would use CGC more to
.express student concerns to' the administration and the
Board cf Trustees through refrrendums.
"I have very good . organizational ability and I've
worked with food service," he said. .
Vandenbergh has worked on the Vice Chancellor's
Food Service Committee and with ECOS. He was on
the nuclear power task force, for Student Government
and in the N.C. Fellows program, where he is trying to
establish a student advisory service. ; :
Kevin Yow, a first-year law student from Winston
Salem is running for CGC District 1, which includes the
law school and physical education department. .
"I want to put my experience to work to provide the
best representation possible in the interest of law stu
dents and the campus as a whole," he said.
While an undergraduate at UNC-Grecnsboro, Yow
served as a senator, president pro tern of the Senate and
parliamentarian.
Also running for CGC district's seats are Sam Howell,
District 2; David Graham, District 4 and Jeff Carnes,
District 8. The students could not be reached for com
ment Sunday.--
history
From pags 1
0
from area schools, only about 75 peop
took part in the workshops.
"The gamut of thinking was so
diversified, though," program
chairperson Ellison said in a post
conference interview. "The part I liked
the best , was the disagreement of
speakers with other speakers and the
questions raised by the audience. We
had speakers staying to listen to others
talk."
The major flaw seen by those working
with this year's program was the lack of
major input by the other schools
involved. Ellison said that one of the
desires of this year's committee was to
have Discovery representatives from
each of the 26 campuses for next year's
piam
From psga 1
worked until about 1:30 a.m. Sunday to free
the seven bodies. Clothing lost from lusgage
and pieces of the plane's instruments, engines
and aluminum hull were scattered over a half
acre of woods. A propeller was dug out of two
or three feet of mud.
Robert Daniel and his two daughters were
among the first to arrive at the scene after they
. heard the plane chopping through trees behind
their ho't, - . t p t $
t "It was so low, I first thought I wp hearing
fa truck on Homestead"," -bkld "said. "I stiU
thought that when I heard a thump. I thought
"That truck's hit something.' But when I heard
it cutting through the woods it sounded just
like a rotary motor I knew it must be a
plane. But I didn't know which way to run
first."
; Daniel and his daughters were able to drive
through the woods on a service road until they
found the wreck. They took blankets with
them in case there were survivors. "It was
pretty clear there was no need for us to do
anything for those people once we got there,"
Daniel said. Daniel's next-door neighbor C.
Preston Hogaa called the Orange County
Rescue Squad for assistance when he heard the
crash.
; "I heard it fly right over my house while we
were eating our evening meal," Hogan said.
"One lady was sitting facing the window and
;she saw the red lights go by. Then I ran outside
and heard the crash about 300 or 400 yards
.away."
; National Transportation Safety Board
officials, who flew from Atlanta to Investigate,
'refused to speculate on the cause of the crash
while at the scene Sunday. "We know there
' was a 400 foot (cloud ceiling) and four-mile
visibility," investigator Preston Hicks said,
v "There was a light rain and fog. But we're not
'assuming anything."
Air traffic controllers at Rakigh-Durham
I Airport were directing the pilot to make an
' instrument landing at Horace Williams, which
has no control tower of its own, when radio
. contact was lost.
i "In our last contact with him he said he was
taking over visually to lend," controller Larry
Johnson said. "I guess he thought he had the
situation in hand."
It w as not known Sunday whether the plane
had started its flight from a Florida airport or
why the pilot wanted to land in Chapel Hill.
According to Hudson, two of the men arid one
of the women on the plane were qualified to
fly the dual-control craft.
GUADALAJARA'
SIKXIER
SCHOOL
University cf Arizona effers
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event.
This is not to say that there was not
any input, said Teresa Artis,
communications specialist for the event.
Artis said she was in touch with the
other schools to find out some of their
ideas about what should be done within ;
the scope of the programs.
The programs, which were supported
by a variety of colleges and
.organizations on campus as well as by
Gov. Jim Hunt and Chancellor
Christopher Fordham, were attended by
25 persons for each program rotating on
an hourly basis. The programs ranged
from lectures to panel discussions to an
African culture presentation by the
BSM's Opeyo Dancers.
"People may view this as
segregationist in that we are only
bringing black students here, but for the
first one, we felt a need to bring only
black students together, a need to sit
down with other blacks so that there is
not a feeling of animosity," Artis said.
Mark Canady, chairperson of the
BSM, said: "As far as the weekend goes,
we reached our goals, but our goals are
long-range ones that cannot tbe, ac
compaih Jjn. just,pne... weekend." We
hope to facilitate our goals' across the
state, so that they will be heard in both
the political arena as well as the
academic one."
V
sen
02
Dear Ana:
Athletically I'm an Ail
American. Romantically
I'm a nerd. I'm in love
with a fox. But the com
petition is rough. VVhat'H I
give her for Valentine's Day?
Nervously Yours,
Chicken Hunk
Dear Chicken:
Don't punt. Send her
flowers. It's probably the
best play you ever made.
And the easiest. Just go to
your nearest FTD Florist.
He has the perfect
Valentine gift. A beautiful
bouquet that comes in a
special bud vase. Even
better, you can afford it.
Remember, when in
doubt, rely on the magic of
flowers. It's the only way a
chicken can catch a fox.
Good hunting.
ri
yr.J ?
"7 si n.
I
From psg3 1
Smith wasn't as pleased after the Tar
Heels downed stubborn Furman in the
second game. Guard Mel Daniel scored .
32 of Furman's 64 points to keep the
Paladins within striking distance
throughout the game.
Carolina's defense was noticeably
weaker than against St. Joseph's,
allowing Furman to score from inside
when Daniel could not hit from the out
side. Carolina again used the fast break to
take a 25-11 lead before Smith inserted
the Blue Team into the lineup at 9:38.
Furman outscored the Blue Team 8-2 to
pull back within six points at 27-21
before the starters, Worthy in
particular, vaulted Carolina back to a
'comfortable margin.
Pepper hit a jumper from deep in the
corner before Worthy hit a jumper and
then electrified the crowd with a dunk
off a steal to extend the Tar Heel lead to
33-21.
Worthy and Perkins continued to
control the de in the second half and
scored 12,of Carolina's 13 points in a
10-minute stretch beginning at 14:20
Perkins scored the last seven points of
the spurt on a layup off a Worthy pass,
two free throws and an three-point play
to lift Carolina to a 16-point lead with
4:43 left. 71-55.
Worthy led five Tar Heels in double
figures with 18 points and Perkins
finished with 17, Mike Pepper added 12
points, mostly on long range jumpers,
and Wood and Daherty scored 10 points
each.
Carolina
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In Our Set-en'b Year
'A
t -
...handicapped students have difficulty getting to class
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By ERNIE JOHNSTON '
Special to the Daly Tar Heel
, Construction on the second phase of
the chilled water loop pipeline near PhEps,
Hanes, Dey and Carroll halls has forced
minor changes in the daily routines of
" many UNC students en route to classes
and down town.
' But few people have been as adversely
affected as the handicapped, said Laura
; L. Drumheller, assistant dean of Student
Life.
porarily in the last few weeks, but Drum
heller said the contractor was making a '
concerted effort to help the handicapped. .
"The contractor (The Billings Co. of
Raleigh) guaranteed they would dig in
front of the entrance, bridges would be
built and they would sort of burrow un
derneath,' Drumheller said.
Thomas S. Shumate, consulting archi
tect for the UNC Planning Office, said
that, despite a few problems, the con-
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BUYING
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Buying CLASS -RINGS, GOLD JEWELRY,
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and WEDDING BANDS, Anything marked
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We now offer...
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DrumheUer, who is a student advisor done Qver vacation
for the handicapped at UNC, said that
. many handicapped people have had a
difficult time adjusting to the new routes
around the construction areas.
"For the visually impaired students, it
is probably a bit more of a problem,"
Drumheller said. "They usually learn the
routes to their spring (semester) classes
.before Christmas. When they can't find
their landmarks like where the edges
of the paths meet it is very disorienting
to have to relearn those routes. It is a
very slow process."
;;' Problems for the handicapped were
not limited to those with impaired vision,
j Drumheller said many students in wheel
. chairs had trouble dealing with the mud
- created by the construction.
Many of the paths are now passable
for most students, but Drumheller said
j that wheelchair "bound students would
- find them virtually impassable.
The wheelchair ramps to Dey and
Hanes halls have both been blocked t em-
helped to cut confusion to a minimum.
"I think they have done a magnificent
' job," Shumate said in a telephone inter
view. "The worst is over now."
Both Shumate and Drumheller praised
the contractor's efforts to minimize the
problems for all students. Shumate
pointed out that the workers filled in
each area soon after a section of the pipe
was laid, so students could get through.
"This is nothing like the mess this
summer in front of the Pine Room and
the Union Tarheel Days were awful,"
Drumheller said, in reference to the first
phase of the project. Eating at the Pine
Room and studying in the libraries were
very difficult this summer, she said.
Edward R. Short, a consulting engineer
for the University, said that most of the
.construction work on the second phase
would be completed by this afternoon or
early Tuesday, and that a pressure check
would be run within a week to check for
leaks. ,
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J Adults S3.S5 bccr & wino permits
Children S2.00 11-11 m-th
1 In tha Corner of Eastaato 1M2Fri
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Classes beginning February 9
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H;:!cl Houco Library
ztzz end Zlcnlrm - Bcbbia Ccnrb 7:C0 pm In tho Chcpcl cX
iho h;::ci Houso
TUHC DAYS
Tha Rabin's c'?.zo ttarts February 2rd at UtlO.
Zz ::lzh LVzllzlzzi - Dr. David H:.'?:r;r 7 pm In Tho H '' 'J
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