Tuesday, February 15, 1983The Daily Tar Heel3
BSM awaits action
on election petition
By KYLE MARSHALL
Starr Writer , ,
The Student Supreme Court has not yet
acted on a complaint filed by the Black Stu
dent Movement concerning a petition for a
recall election for the BSM chairperson,
Supreme Court Chief Justice J.B. Kelly said
Monday. ,
Because of cases involving the referendums
in last Tuesday's campus elections, Kelly said
the court has not had time to review the BSM's
case against Student Body President Mike
Vandenbergh, who ordered the recall election.
The recall election set by Vandenbergh and
Elections Board Chairman Stan Evans was
blocked by the cotirt's temporary restraining
order just before Jan. 25, the date the election
was to have taken place.
Kelly said a pre-trial hearing would be called
soon. Both the BSM and Student Government
have filed reports, but he said the matter was
"at a standstill."
In early December, Former BSM Treasurer
Harvey Jenkins submitted a petition with 45
names, calling for the recall election to
Vandenbergh. According to the Student Con
stitution, 45 percent of a student
organization's members must sign a petition in
order to recall an officer of the organization.
As of December, there were about 290 people
in the BSM.
Vandenbergh then ordered Evans to prepare
for the recall election.
In late December, the BSM filed a complaint
with the Court on the grounds that Student
Government should not be involved in the
BSM's affairs.
But the complaint was withdrawn in Janu
ary, and was revised and resubmitted by BSM
chairperson Wende Watson on Jan. 28.
"There were some deficiencies in the first
complaint," Kelly said. "In the second com
plaint, the issues are more clearly defined.
Unemployment, trade panel discussion
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"Trade and Unemployment Global
Bread-and-Butter Issues" will be the topic of a
panel discussion today at 7:30 p.m. in Toy
Lounge of Dey Hall. The free public program,
part of the Great Decisions '83 lecture series,
will feature James Ingram, UNC professor of
economics, Alfred J. Field, associate professor
of economics at the University, and John
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. should not be trying to run their affairs," he
said.
UNC law student Bernard Alston, who is
representing the BSM in the case, said Student
Government did not properly interpret the
Student Constitution when it determined the
recall election for BSM chairperson.
"The BSM position is that the Executive
Branch, by issuing an order for the election,
overstated its authority," Alston said. "The
Student Constitution does not settle what hap
pens in all conflicts."
The disagreement centers on which constitu
tion should be followed in establishing a recall
election the BSM's or Student
Government's constitution.
To recall an officer, the BSM constitution
requires a petition with 45 signatures from the
general membership and five from the Central
Committee, comprised of the group's ex
ecutives. "The Student Constitution doesn't
say what happens when an organization has its
own provision (for calling an election),"
Alston said.
Vandenbergh said the BSM had a legitimate
concern. "But I don't know if it applies in this
case," he said.
"As long as a group is considered to be a
part of Student Government, and it is if it
receives funding from the Campus Governing
Council, the Student Constitution should take
precedence in cases of conflict," Vandenbergh
said.
"But I don't want Student Government to
be running elections indiscriminately," he
said.
Regular BSM elections are scheduled for the
first week in March. Kelly said that the regular
elections would be discussed in the pre-trial
hearing.
Alston said he wanted the issue to be resolv
ed because the outcome "has precedence for
all organizations."
Jacobson, assistant visiting professor
of
political science at Duke University.
The discussion will focus on how unemploy
ment and recession have affected industrial
and developing countries, and whether these
countries can cooperate in planned economic
production.
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Children in North Carolina Memorial
Hospital do not have to miss school. School
comes to them.
Because of the hospital school, children
like Enrol Harris can keep up with their
classwork while in the hospital.
Harris is regularly a seventh-grader at
Chatham Middle School. He has been a
student in the hospital off and on since he
was 5 years old.
"I like school okay," Harris said. "But
as you get older they work you harder." .
He is in school about two hours a day while
in the hospital and studies the subjects he
normally has -while at home.
The children come from all parts of the
state and beyond to NCMH for treatment.
And while there they attend school just like
their peers. ,
Each child has his own study plan and
has individualized instruction by either a
volunteer, teacher's aide or one of seven
teachers, said Mary Lou Pollock, principal
of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Hospital
School.
The program at NCMH is under the
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and is
the largest such program in the state.
o- "Most people think there are only eight
t schools in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro school
district," Pollock said. "They forget we
).have a program in the hospital that serves
qas many."
i ' The hospital school's enrollment varies
c daily from 35 to 50 children. Each child
: receives approximately two hours of in
tense study daily.
"We get all ages and we never know how
long they are going to stay in," Pollock
said.
"We contact the children's home school
to find out what they are studying," she
said. "After they are released we send a let
ter telling what they've done while here."
Students, who are able to come to the
classroom work in small groups, Teachers
TOMOMSOW IS ASH
WEDNESDAY
L..XK O) V M
f.
on campus at Franklin St. between
Morehead and Spencer
m LENT B83-
"Is not this what I require of you as a fast; to loose the fetters of injustice, to
untie the knots of the yoke, to snap every yoke and set free those who have
been crushed?
Is it not sharing your food with the hungry, taking the homeless into your
house, clothing the naked when you meet them and never evading a duty to
your kinsfolk?
Then shall your light break forth like the dawn and soon you will grow healthy
like a wound newly healed. . . . Isaiah 58:6-8
Ash Wednesday, February 16, 1983
7:30 a.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite II (said)
10:00 a.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite I (said) ,
12:15 p.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite I (said)
5:15 p.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite II (sung)
8:00 p.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite I (sung)
10:00 p.m. The Way (Stations) of the Cross: A devotional service
(suns)
A Penitential Order will be said and the imposition of ashes will be available
at every Eucharist. A priest will be available from 8:30 a.m. until 5:15 p.m.,
and from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. from spiritual counsel or for the Rite for the
Reconciliation of a Penitent.
Weekdays in Lent
Mondays 12:15 p.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite II
5:15 p.m. Evening Prayer
Tuedays 7:30 a.m. The Holy Eucharist: Rite II
12:15 p.m. Noonday Prayers
5:15 p.m.
10:00 a.m.
12:15 p.m.
Wednesdays
5:15 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
Thursday 12:15 p.m.
5:15 p.m.
Fridays 12:15 p.m.
5:15 p.m.
nomewom aonej
v:v:-::.-iv - :::;:::::::::.:.- :;--.
s
End Harris of Chatham
... study programs are now
go to the children who cannot be moved.
Teamwork between the hospital and
school was the reason for the success of the
program, Pollock said.
' "We meet on Monday of every week so
that-we all know what is going on with the
children," she said. "We have to work as a
team to understand the complex problems
of the children. The body is not the only
important thing here, the whole child must
be taken into account."
Martha Whitfield, nursing supervisor
Feeling lost?
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Read The Daily Tar Heel
and get back into the
mainstream!
Evening Prayer
The Holy Eucharist: 1928 Prayer Book
Noonday Prayers
Evensong on March 2 and March 23
Evening Prayer other days
The Holy Eucharist: Rite II
(except March 9)
Noonday Prayers
The Holy Eucharist: Rite II
The Holy Eucharist: Rite II
Evening Prayer
mm
v
Middle School catches up on his
available at NCMH to keep pupils
for seventh floor pediatrics east-west, said,
"The school helps keep the children busy
so they don't have time to dwell on their ill
ness. "They fuss a little about school, just like
other children. But those who go to school
while here adjust better after they are
released. We don't treat them like they are
sick. We treat them like normal children."
Pollock said the teachers know about the
various medical problems the students have
so they can adjust the children's studies to
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