4The Daily Tar HeelMonday, October 26, 1987
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Minority high school students visit campus
to attend Honors Day recruitment program
From staff reports
More than 200 minority high
school students and parents
attended the first annual High
School Honors Day, a minority
recruitment event held Saturday in
the Student Union. ;
The event was sponsored by the
Black Student Movement, along
with the Office of . University
Affairs and the admissions office.
The students, who rank in the
top 15 percent of their high school
classes, participated in sessions
sponsored by the admissions
office, student aid office and
several campus organizations.
Fulbright scholarships awarded
Three UNC students have
received Fulbright scholar grants
for graduate study abroad,.!
Michael Collins, a graduate of
the University of Arizona, and a
student in UNC's Departinent of
University Briefs
Slavic Languages, will study
Slavic languages in Yugoslavia.
Musicology student Liane Cur
tis, a graduate of the University
of California at Santa Barbara,
will conduct research on 15th
century music in Germany.
University of Alabama graduate
Penelope Pynes will study lingu
istic patterns in the speech of
Mannheim teenagers in Germany.
ROTC sponsors speech
Capt. James Pisaranni, former
commanding officer of the
nuclear-powered trident subma
rine USS Ohio, will speak to
ROTC midshipmen and other
interested students today at 2 p.m.
in the NROTC Building.
Pisaranni, who is now stationed
in Norfolk, Va., will speak on U.S.
submarine operations and his
experiences on the USS Ohio.
Merrimon Lecture to be given
Dr. Jared Diamond, professor
of physiology at the University of
California-Los Angeles Medical
School, will deliver the annual
Merrimon Lecture in Medicine
Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Berryhill
Hall.
Diamond has written over 100
papers in the fields of membrane
physiology and evolutionary ecol
ogy. He is also an active environ
mentalist and a writer of popular
science.
The Merrimon Lecture was
established in 1966 by the late Dr.
Louise Merrimon Perry to pro
mote study of traditions of med
icine and bioethics. The lecture is
free and open to the public.
Democrats
from page 1 "
sources, the platform said J It also
suggested that a tax increase may be
necessary to fund increased spending.
Regarding the U.S. trade! deficit,
the platform said tax breaks for
industrial development have been
used to move manufacturing industry
abroad, and measures of protection
ism have led to retaliation by United
States trading partners, aggravating
the trade deficit and leading to job
losses in the United States. ;
"We cry out for 'a level playing
field while digging the hole that keeps
us from being competitive," the
Young Democrats said n their
platform. "The Reagan Administra
tion's adherence to " laissez-faire
economics in a world of assisted
industry keeps digging oar hole
deeper."
Instead, the Young Democrats
encouraged Reagan to adopt eco
nomic policies that incorporate
succesful policy elements of U.S.
trading partners and suggested that
major industrial nations establish
rules for international trade. I !
The Young Democrats linked
economic performance to education
in its platform, saying that "investing
in the educational system is the key
to making us competitive in the world
market.''
Their recommendations included
higher teacher salaries, measures to
reduce illiteracy and high school
curricula grounded in basics such as
English, math and science.
Other planks in the platform
included:
B a temporary moratorium on
farm foreclosures;
B a commitment to economic
justice through affirmative action,
and
B a commitment to foreign policies
that "reflect the interest of all nations,
not just our self-interest."
"We hope to get our platform
incorporated into the state and
national platforms," said Jim Galla
her, president of the statewide organ
ization. "But we also need to branch
out and disseminate the platform to
grass roots organizations and college
campuses." '
Of 11 resolutions submitted in
conjunction by the UNC-Orange
County delegation, the delegates '
debated and passed only one.
The resolution, written by Robert ,?
Page of UNC, opposed the nomina- '
tion of Judge Robert Bork to the U.S.
Supreme Court. The resolution urged
the president to "present a nominee -"
who supports civil rights, recognizes "
the right to privacy and defends free
speech."
Although the Senate voted last ,1
week to reject Bork's nomination,
Page said the resolution was
appropriate.
"We will go on record for opposing
Bork for these reasons, and we would '
oppose another candidate for these
reasons," Page said.
In a related meeting held after the "
convention, UNC student Nancy '
Johnson was elected treasurer of the
N.C. Federation of College''
Democrats.
BLUE-WHITE
BASKETBALL
Be among the fiist to see the 1987-88 basketball Tar Heels, including the
debut of Carolina's new freshmen!
Student tickets ari now available for the Blue-White basketball games. The
first game will be played in the Smith Center immediately following the
Carolina-Clemsoafootball game on November 7. The halftime will only be
five minutes sq you can get out in time for your Saturday night plans
The second Blue-White game will be played at 7:30 PM on Saturday evening,
November 14 in barmichael Auditorium (Nostalgia Night in Carmichael).
HOW TO GET YOUR TICKETS:
'A
Present your student ID and athletic pass at the Smith Center Box office
between 8:00 AM ind 5:00 PM. Students may also purchase guest tickets for
$5.00 in'addition to their complimentary student ticket.
BLOCK SEATING AVAILABLE
Student groups o 50 or more are welcome to send a representative to the
Ticket Office with the groups athletic passes for block seating.
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