6The Daily Tar HeelWednesday, March 1, 1989 Campus Police Roundup a A man called police at 10:30 a.m. Sunday to be let out of Davis Library. He told police he had been asleep there since Saturday afternoon. B Police were asked to get an opossum out of a janitor's closet in Wing B of the Medical School at 4:22 a.m. Monday. B An intoxicated Granville South resident created a loud scene and spoke in contemptuous tones to a resident assistant in Winston Residence Hall at 1:26 a.m. Saturday. The man was gone when police arrived. B Jewelry valued at $400 and 52 cash was stolen from an unat tended bookbag at the Student Union at 10:09 p.m. Thursday. B A moped was stolen from beside the dumpster at Ehringhaus Residence Hall at 5: 15 p.m. Thurs day, but was returned intact after the report was filed. D A Grounds Department employee reported that an uniden tified male knocked him down while inside a van at the Grounds Department at 1:32 p.m. Wednes day. The magistrate refused to draft a warrant because the name of the assailant was not known. B A woman left her meal card on the checkout counter at Chase Hall at 2:58 p.m. Wednesday, and returned four hours later to find that someone had made $192 worth of food purchases with it. B Parking cones originally set up by police were scattered on Hanes Hall parking lot at 2:34 a.m. Wednesday. An officer watched the area covertly, and a man was observed picking up a cone. Police spoke with the man and offered some advice. compiled by Sarah Cagle Rainroey,, ElDoottlt worn coograss rao mm By JAMES COBLIN Staff Writer Deanna Ramey (Dist. 10) and Tom Elliott (Dist. 6) were both elected to Student Congress in tight races in Tuesday night's runoff election, according to unofficial results. Ramey won in District 10, defeat ing Donnie Esposito by three votes, 185-182. "It was so close," Ramey said. "On the whole I was very happy to be in the runoff. I am very excited. "Donnie would be well within his rights to ask for a recount. I wouldn't hold it against him. When it was so close at the end I was even considering asking for a recount." Ramey said one of her first prior ities in congress would be to get on the parking committee. "I think that communication between Chapel Hill and UNC should be better on transportation," she said. Esposito said he would wait for a Elections 89 recount. "My understanding is that with a vote this close they will go ahead and re-count the votes," he said. "I don't know what else I can do." There was some confusion after last week's election, Esposito said. . "Many of my supporters '. were confused after the first election and assumed I'd won," he said. "We got apathetic toward the end, and during the runoff Lewis Residence Hall was a big failure. We should have worked harder," he said. Problems with the Health Sciences Library pollsite caused a re-election in District 6. The site was not opened until 1 p.m. last week. Ram Ramachandran won in the original election, but Elliott defeated him Tuesday with a 96-73 vote for District 6. "Apparently the voter turnout was tremendous and many more people voted," Elliott said. "I dont think you can predict what will happen. I am very happy about how things turned out." Ramachandran said he will seek a recount, because the voter turnout was unusually high outside the. district pollsite. "It doesn't seem possible that so many grad students would take the trouble to turn out in these places," he said. ""Health Sciences got les' votes than the Student Union, Cam-' pus Y and Davis, and Health Sciences is where our biggest representation' is." ' : . Elliott said he would like to work', to fund the Student Health Action Committee. "I feel that such a public health, organization should get the funding, it deserves," he said. Journalists to celebrate information legislation :oymi(dler of Washington) Monthly to speak By DANA CLINTON LUMSDEN Staff Writer The man who is called the Don Quixote of Washington will visit UNC today as part of "Flashback: The '60s," the 1989 Fine Arts Festival. Charles Peters, an award-winning journalist and founder and editor-in-chief of The Washington Monthly, is scheduled to speak today at 3:30 p.m. in Gerrard Hall. Peters is a good representative of 1960s liberal journalism, said Blan Holman, a sophomore from Colum- Fine Arts Festival bia, S.C., and a member of the committee working with the festival. "The reason that he was chosen is because he's been tracking political thought since the '60s," he said. "He started what is today called liberal journalism during the '60s and the school of that political thought," Holman said. "He's young enough to be able to speak about it effectively 1 4 The Return of Comedian f3 ST ill N Seen on David Letterman, HBO, Johnny Carson, Saturday Night Live Tickets on Sale Mar. 2 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 8:00 PM MEMORIAL HALL UIMC Students $8.00 - General Public $11.00 Carolina Union Box Office 962-1449 Presented by Carolina Union Social Committee and old enough to have lived through it with some understanding.' Often described as "quixotic" by many people in Washington and even by himself (he has named his column in the Monthly "Tilting at Wind mills"), Peters magazine often tries to find the bottom line in a city filled with bureaucracy and corruption. . .You have to find ways of end running the bureaucracy to find what's going on," Peters said in an interview with the Washington Post last June. "To find out the good ideas that they are hiding from you and the bad news they're hiding from you, because the bureaucracy has a ten dency to suppress both." Peters, a lawyer and a former West Virginia state legislator, started one of the first of the Washington-based magazines that have come out in recent years. Peters, who was 42 when he started the Monthly, said in an interview with Newsweek last May that he didn't have much experience. In 1 978 he received a Columbia Journalism Award, and in 1980 he was made a Poynter Fellow at Yale University. While Peters himself has received many scholarly awards, his magazine has also received numerous awards,, including the New York University .Department of Journalism's Don Hollenbeck Award and the American Bar Association's Silver Gavel Award. In an interview with Newsweek, Peters said, "I wanted to look at Washington the way an anthropol ogist looks at a South Sea island." See something newsworthy! Call 962-0245 r COLLEGE GRADUATES!!! PUBLIC HEALTH ENTHUSIASTS!!! FIND YOURSELF IN THE U.S. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE AS A PUBLIC HEALTH ASSOCIATE WORKING WITH THE CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL. Entry level positions in the area of sexually trans mitted disease intervention are available nation wide. We need college graduates with STRONG INTER PERSONAL SKILLS who wish to establish careers with advancement opportunities in the field of Public Health. A bachelor's degree or qualifying master's degree or revelevant graduate coursework is required. CANDIDATES MUST BE WILLING TO RELOCATE INITIALLY, AT THEIR OWN EXPENSE, to areas where needs exist and must be available for sub sequent career transfers, reimbursable at govern ment expense, as program needs dictate. FLUENCY IN SPANISH IS HIGHLY DESIRABLE for some geographical areas In the country. All appli cants must be U.S. Citizens and possess a valid driver's license to be considered for employment. Starting Salaries range from $19,413 (Bachelor's Degree) to $21 ,443 (Applicable Graduate Degree or Coursework). For additional information please call t -800-537-2522. In Georgia, phone 639-1816. Or write to: The Centers for Disease Control Freeway Office Park, Room 345, MS E07 1 600 Clifton Road N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30333 v. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER n fi "COLLEGE TOURS" PRESENTS - 8 days a 7 nights wvuily PRICE INCLUDES: HOTEL on beautiful Nichupt lagoon Roundtrip airfare to Cancun 'Lodging (4 per room) in a 3 or 4 star hotel Private cocktail parties-FREE! Exclusive College Tours Cancun Spring Break T-shirt Discount coupons good for complimentary drinks and special deals at local restaurants and establishments Exclusive parties at Cancun's HOTTEST night clubs Best Tan Contests for guys and girls Special mid-week 3 hour 10 star party with FREE drinks and food Co-ed tournaments and beach events: Volleyball, tug-of-war, belly-flop contest and many more PRIZES FOR THE WINNERS! Orientation session for optional activities such as: skin and scuba diving, parasailing, windsurfing, watersking, catamaraning, Cozumel excursions and exploring Mayan ruins. AND MUCH MUCH MORE! SPACE STILL AVAILABLE; Make Your Reservation by Phone: 1-800-727-0005 For more information, please contact your college representative Scott Marler 967-6969 . or call our Home Office at 1-800-727-0005 T7n IK 0 Week Mm February 28 - March 3 at Student Stores Ordering your class ring this week gives you a chance to win fabu lous prizes ! Winners chosen everyday! Prizes include: Free Class Ring, Gift Certifi cates, UNC T-Shirts, Sweat shirts, Mugs and more! Also, excellent savings dur ing this special week! Discover a Treasure of Value & Savings! $10 DEPOSIT Ufl HERFF JONES By LESLIE WILSON Staff Writer Paul McMasters, deputy editorial director for USA Today, will speak about the Freedom of Information Act (FOI A) tonight to celebrate Freedom of Information Day. McMasters, who is also chairman of the Society of Professional Jour nalists' (SPJ) national FOI Commit tee, will speak in 104 Howell Hall at 7:30 p.m. The program is sponsored by the UNC SPJ chapter, and admission is free. The actual FOI Day, President James Madison's birthday, is March 16. Madison was a pioneer in creating and maintaining a free press in the United States. SPJ is celebrating FOI Day today because the actual day coincides with spring break and because this is the day McMasters will be available to speak, said Susan Summey, president of SPJ. "He (McMasters) is the person to get to speak about the FOI Act," Summey said. "He is probably one Seniors of the biggest speakers at the jour nalism school." When the FOI A passed, all citi zens, not just journalists, gained access to much more information than before, Summey said. "It was a heyday." But bureaucracy made the act more difficult to use to get information -than it should have been, said Lee Ann Necessary, SPJ's FOIA chair woman at UNC. McMasters will address the ques tion of whether the campus press is free today, Necessary said. He will speak on the topics of crisis and credibility with the FOIA, especially concerning dangers to the papers on campus, she added. "He will also explain how, if you do need to use the FOIA, it is accessible to you," she said. ? Some SPJ members will go out to' dinner with McMasters before his speech to discuss the FOIA. McMas--ters will also speak to two journalism classes Thursday morning. , from page 1 victory. Saad talked to nearly 1,500 students over the last week, he said. "I went to more places and saw more students," he said. "I commend Anna, because she" ran really hard and did a really good job." Increasing involvement among next year's senior class will be Saad's first priority once in office, he said. Baird said she concentrated on the on-campus vote during the past week because the off-campus returns from last week's election seemed greatly in her favor, she said. "I tried to do a little bit more concentration on campus and more one-to-one contact with people, but I didn't do as much as I'd like to have, and I think it showed," she said. were rghting for Amsrlaon Heart , s your ufe :...; . , Assbctatlon ; iririritirkiririr-kiriritiriririririririririririr ANNOUNCING THE 1990 MISS NORTH CAROLINA USA and MISS NORTH CAROLINA TEEN USA PAGEANTS Independently produced by Tel-Air Interests. Inc. NORTH CAROLINA'S ONLY PRELIMINARY TO THE MISS TEEN USA. MISS USA and MISS UNIVERSE PAGEANTS NO PERFORMING TALENT REQUIRED The search is on to find Miss North Carolina USAr1990 and Miss North Carolina Ten USA 1990. Entrants will be judged on beauty, poise 3 it ' . ' ' ; J TT JACQUELINE PADGETTE MISS NORTH CAROLINA i USA-1989 NAME ? ADDRESS C,TY- PHONE ( J it and personality. The Miss North Carolina USA and Miss North Carolina Teen USA pageants will be held on the weekend of August 5th. To find out if you qualify fill out the following request form and return it to: THE 1990 MISS NORTH CAROLINA USATEEN USA PAGEANTS co TEL-AIR INTERESTS, INC. 1755 N.E. 149 STREET MIAMI, FL 33181-1099 or call (305)944-3268 w ism. : w - - 1 t J' - ' KELLY SHEPPARD MISS NORTH CAROLINA TEEN USA-1989 ir it ir ir ir ir IF THIS DOES NOT PERTAIN TO YOU PASS IT ON TO A FRIEND iririciricicirirkiriricirir&iric PLEASE SEND ME INFORMATION ON THE 1990 MISS NORTH CAROLINA USA TEEN USA PAGEANTS BIRTH DATE . STATE. .ZIP. Faculty, Staff & Students. . . Enjoy a relaxed atmosphere and good foodat UNLIMITED SECONDS CAFETERIA MEAL TIMES " COST Breakfast 7am-10 am Continental Breakfast: 9:30am-10am Lunch: 11am-2:30pm Dinner: 4:30pm-7:30pri $3.25 $3.00 $3.95 $4.65 tax CASH & ALL MEAL CARDS ACCEPTED! V