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2The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday, September 16, 1992 I .1. A. -m m - -m - .1- LEAN CUISINE GLAZED CHICKEN n( 8.5 OL "'" 1 LB. Z- I PERDUE BONELESS FILLET IN THE t DEUBAKERY FRESHLY MADE CUCUMBER SALAD 0(p)(p) M1H WVW PEPSI OR DIET PEPSI 2 ire. (olfo) 0 PEPS XTCA Vma L JJ F lu I ii f PEPS 7t Lk2 STUDENT'S WE INVITE YOU TO APPLY FOR YOUR HARRIS TEETER COURTESY CARD. 1 CALIFORNIA CARROTS GET ONE FREE! IT ALLOWS YOU TO CASH PERSONAL CHECKS AT OVER 134 HARRIS TEETER LOCATIONS IN GEORGIA, SOUTH CAROLINA, NORTH CAROLINA, VIRGINIA AND TENNESSEE TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS $ 1 .00 COUPON AND SAVE. - thru tT JmJi'"1'''" irnt idMl! VALUE L PLU 2039 PRODUCE BUY ONE 50 CT. HT IBUPROFEN TABS OR CAPS GET ONE FREE Be Reproduced limit M Une (.oufjon rtr family Per Viwl WirS Minimum Purchoie SIO 00. Offer -Good September 16 I.-. Y 100? GROCERY COUPON VALUE S2.99 ( Ibupfofen N I J 1o PF ! ANY $3.00 OR MORE PURCHASE IN OUR PRODUCE DEPARTMENT THIS COUPON MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED. LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY PER VISIT OFFER GOOD SEPT. 16 THRU SEPT. 22, 1992 PRODUCE COUPON VALUE $1.00 BUY ONE OF THE BELOW. MID GET ONE 18 OZ. BOX OF KELLOGG' S CORN FLAKES FREE! IS OZ. KELLOGG1 S CORN FLAKES,! 5 OZ. FROOT LOOPS, 15 OZ. CORN POPS OR 15.1 OZ. CINNAMON MINI BUNS Tfii, Coupon May Nc4 6e Reproduced limit One Coupon Per famify Per Visit With Minimum Purcfoie J10 00 Offer Good September 16 iku September 22.1992 COUPON VALUE SL6? 2lf 'Si PLU 201 1 GROCERY - mm w w w - m m mrn mrm v rmmmm - r w lj lj - mm m m. mum rnrn a. a. m m m m rilUCSt III I Ilia HU ClieUUVK VVKUIiKSUdV. OBUtHII UHI ID IIIIIJUUII I MKSUdV. OKUIKI I JUKI ZZ. Ill LlldUKI rllll IUIKS uniy. we neserve i ne higni i o umir uuaruuies. none ooia i o ueaiere. we uiaaiy accept reaerai rooa cramps. Scholarship provides chance to learn through travel abroad By Casella Foster Staff Writer Recipients of the Frances Phillips Scholarship, a program that pays for students to travel abroad, receive the unique opportunity to learn about other countries and themselves through travel experiences tailored to their individual educational goals. The scholarship, established in 1971, provides funds for juniors and seniors that attended a N.C. high school to travel almost anywhere in the world for two months to six months. The scholar ship allows students to design their own travel itinerary, said Frederic Schroeder, dean of students. Scholarship recipients must be en rolled in the College of Arts and Sci ences and have good grades and leader ship skills, Schroeder said. The scholarship was founded by Frances Phillips, editor-in-chief of the William Morrow Publishing Co., who wished to give students who might not have the resources to go abroad the chance to travel, Schroeder said. Phillips, a native of Walla Walla, Wash., was the great-niece of Cornelia Phillips Spencer, who rang the bell that Kuralt to resubmit proposal By Shakti Routray Staff Writer A plan to improve the downtown environment of Chapel Hill will be re submitted within the week to the Chapel Hill Town Council by Wallace Kuralt. Kuralt, owner of Intimate Bookshop, originally proposed creating a mall area along the 100 block of East Franklin Street at a town council meeting last spring. The plan consists of dividing the block into three sections with a center mall at either end of the block and a special parking area in the center of the block. Kuralt said he based his proposal on things that he has seen in other cities and other countries. "I envision the mall areas as gather ing spots and resting places," Kuralt stated in his proposal. "Food would be available from vendors or from regular merchants or could be brought from home. "Landscaped areas and trees would provide plenty of greenery . . . Benches would provide plenty of seating for resting or chatting," Kuralt stated. "A variety of small events could take place on the mall." On either side of the mall area would be one lane of traffic flowing in each direction to allow "normal access for shoppers, delivery vehicles, passenger buses, bicycles and emergency vehicles, while permitting property owners in the area full access to their own parking and delivery facilities." In addition, Kuralt' s proposal in cludes an alternative plan for rerouting trucks and for avoiding congestion dur ing rush-hour periods on Franklin Street. But Kuralt has not been successful in convincing the members of the Chapel Hill Town Council to implement the plan. David Bonk, a town transportation planner, said Tuesday that Kuralt' s major proposal to change the flow of traffic would not be put into effect. In spite of the opposition, Kuralt hopes to clarify his proposal and per suade the council to reconsider the plan. "I was sort of unhappy with some of the comments that the town planners had added to (the proposal)," Kuralt said. "Some of the comments were mis taken, and I believed them to be in error." Among the misconceptions about the proposal was a belief that the mall area would create congestion and other traf fic problems, Kuralt said. But Kuralt includes calculations of the amount of time it would take for a car to get through the area. "All of my studies would seem to indicate that traffic could be rerouted from Franklin Street around to Rose mary and back and that the cars choos ing this route would probably arrive at the other end of Franklin more quickly than if they chose to remain on Franklin all the way through," Kuralt stated in his proposal. "This would leave the 100 block of East Franklin more a pedes trian area with a small parking lot than the racetrack it now seems to be." BAC from page 1 "Do the Right Thing," "Jungle Fever" and the upcoming "Malcolm X," read about the march on South Building last week in the New York Times. After reading the story Friday, Lee called the BCC and offered to come to Chapel Hill to speak on behalf of the movement. Lee is a nephew by marriage of the late Professor Sonja Stone, for whom the present BCC is named and for whom students want to name a new free-standing building. Anna Griffin reopened the University after the Civil War, Schroeder said. "She had a lot of Chapel Hill ties," he said. Schroeder said Phillips, a regular trav eler, also wanted the scholarship recipi ent to "have good manners and a sense of humor." Schroeder said that although the re quirements sounded unusual, many scholarship recipients told him having manners and a sense of humor made it easier for them to adapt to new cultures."She was probably very fore sighted," Schroeder said. "(Frances Phillips' ) sense is that one grows through the experiences of travel, through the challenges of travel and through the people one meets." Jennifer Shively, a senior who par ticipated in the program last year, origi nally planned to travel just to France, but changed her schedule because the scholarship committee thought she should get exposure to different coun tries. "I went to Greece, Italy, England, France and Spain," Shively said. Shively said she had her share of challenges while traveling. In Europe, she was robbed, went for days without money and "learned a lot about being on (her) own." "I wish I could do it again ... espe cially go back to Spain," Shively added. "I learned more than I can put in words." Marciea McMillian, a senior from Fayetteville, visited Spain, France, Ger many and Czechoslovakia last year on the Phillips Scholarship. "I really loved Czechoslovakia be cause it shocked me because I didn't know what to expect," she said. "The people were so friendly." Schroeder said students didn't need to know how to speak a particular lan guage to receive a scholarship. Shi vely said she spoke French before her tripto Europe. Her training in French also helped her recognize some Spanish and Italian words, she said. "French helped me a lot," she said. McMillian, who spoke Spanish be fore her trip, said her Spanish abilities developed with experience she received from speaking with natives. Schroeder said students interested in applying for the scholarship for spring, summer or fall of 1993 could pick up an application at 300 Vance Hall. The dead line for turning in applications is Sept. 30, he said. Jennifer Talhelm contributed to this story. Seattle PBS veteran to head UNC stations By Justin Scheef Staff Writer A senior vice president for a Seattle public television station has been cho sen as the new director of die UNC Center for Public Television. At its Sept. 1 1 meeting, the UNC Board of Governors named Tom Howe, senior vice president and sta tion manager for KCTS-TV, a public television station in Seattle, as the center's new director. Howe, who will succeed Jake Dunlop, will begin work Nov. 1. "(Howe) was a wonderfully quali fied person with many years of expe rience in the field," said UNC-systcm President CD. Spangler, who nomi nated Howe for the post. A Search committee received 169 applications for the position before recommending Howe to Spangler. "1 am very excited about (the ap pointment)," Howe said this week. "I am very privileged to be given the chance to serve the people of North Carolina." Diana Hatch, director of communi cations at UNC Public Television, said Howe was very qualified for the posi tion. "I think he shows potential to do a very good job here at UNC Public : Television," she said. "He's very en thusiastic, employee-oriented and has an excellent production background which will serve the center." Howe has been involved in public television for the past 24 years. He began his career at KPBS-TV in San Diego, where he worked on 12 nation ally distributed films. Howe then held various producing and managing po sitions in Hawaii, Nebraska and New Mexico. At KCTS, where he worked since 1983, Howe helped increase the : station's cumulative audience by 34 : percent and boost subscription rev cnue from $3 5 million to $9.5 mil-, lion. He also supervised a number of productions which won a total of 120 program awards, including a national Emmy and a Peabody Award. Howe also was involved in the pro duction of several prime-time national PBS programs, including the Outreach project, vAmcrica in die Age of AIDS" and "The Miracle Planet" series, one of the most-watched PBS programs in 1990. Howe said he was looking to bring some of those.acalaims to, UNC Pub , lie Television. "The appointment) is an excellent opportunity to take what is built and try to enrich and improve on that," he said. "I want to do a lot of listening to the staff there. I want to get ideas on where the center will go in die future." UNC operates 10 stations in North Carolina with a weekly audience of more than 700,000 households of households in the state. "The center is one of the jewels of public television operations," Howe said. BCC from page 1 Nov. 13 deadline. "(The Nov. 13 deadline) isn't in my mind," Hardin said. "But the urgency of student feelings is in my mind. This could happen pretty fast." Hardin said he had decided to take himself out of the immediate discus sions of the issue as a means of moving the talks along more quickly. "I have a sense that the conversation might go better if there isn't any sense of 'us against the chancellor,'" he said. "If my participating in the discussion is an impediment, I'm willing for some one else to take the lead." McCormick said that while the chan cellor did have final say in the matter, he expected Hardin to approve the recom mendation of the group. "He will look at the recommendation and understand how much work and heart went into it," McCormick said. "Of course, he has right of refusal he is after all, the chancellor but I expect him to ap prove whatever we come up with." The BCC issue has gained national media attention since the beginning of the school year, with a story in The New York Times Friday and a mention on "Nightline" Sept. 7. On Sept. 3, after a speakout in the Pit, about 300 BCC supporters marched to Hardin's home on Country Club Road and protested there for almost 45 min utes. The Times article on the protest and on the BAC caught the attention of filmmaker Spike Lee. Lee will visit the University to speak at 10 p.m. Friday at the Smith Center. Last Thursday, more than 300 stu dentsmarched on South Building, where the University's main administrative offices are located, and presented Hardin with a letter demanding action toward a free-standing BCC by Nov. 13. In the letter, BAC members, a group of black athletes who support a free standing BCC, demanded that Hardin designate a sight for a new center and pledge his written support for the BCC by Nov. 13. "Your written support for a free standing Sonja H. Stone Black Cultural Center, designation of a site, as well as the deadline given are NON-NEGOTIABLE," the letter states. "Failure to respond to this deadline will leave the people no other choice but to organize toward direct action." Campus Calendar WEDNESDAY 11 a.m. BSM Committee on Racism will hold a tour of the BCC leaving from the Pit. Tours will also be held at noon and I p.m. 12:20 p.m. Ph.D. Public Policy Analysis Cur riculum will welcome Michael Munger, professor of political sciencepublic policy, to speak on "Ethical Implications of Host State Identification for South east Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact. 3 p.m. Carolina Fever will leave from the Union to go to the women's soccer game at N.C. State. Information: 962-4300. 3:30 p.m. Study Abroad will have an information session on UNAM in Mexico in 12 Caldwell. 4 p.m. Industrial Relations Association will wel come Beverly Morgan, manager of recruitment for Glaxo, in 205 Union. Undergraduate Sociology Club will present Viclu Lotz, counselor of liberal arts and journalism from UCS. in 51 7 Hamilton. 4:30 p.m. Study Abroad will have an information session on University of Belgrano in Argentina in 1 2 Caldwell. 5 p.m. Homecoming Committee will meet in 21 8 Union. La Casa Espanola: Vena tomar tapascon nosotros en La Cucina Rustica. AIESEC will hold its first interest meeting in Union 210. 5:30 p.m. Asian Students Association will have a picnic at Mclver beach. The meal is S3 for non members and $ 1 for members. Lutheran Campus Ministry will have a commun ion service, followed by a fellowship meal at 6:15 p.m. Newman Center will present Student Night with a discussion on social justice issues by Bishop F.Joseph Gossman. 6 p.m. Arab-American Association will meet in 213 Union. Wesley Foundation will welcome students for food and fellowship. UNC Student-led New Alliance Party will meet at the sundial to carpool to its weekly meeting at the N.C. Lenora B. Fulani For President campaign head quarters. Information: 490-5253. 6:30 p.m. Sangam, the Indian Student Associa tion, will meet in 208 Union. 7 p.m. SHS Black Cultural Center will hold the Second Annua Celebration Commemorating the Life and Legacy of Dr. Sonja Stone in Memorial Hall. Student Environmental Action Coalition will have a general meeting in 206 Union and address 'The Urban Environment." 7:15 p.m. Hillel will offer rides to Durham to hear Israeli Consul David Akov. 7:30 p.m. UNC Entrepreneurs Club will meet in 210 Union. Information: 914-7217. UNC Shag Club will meet in the Women's Gym. Information. 929-8246. STV will have a meeting for people interested in writing for "General College" in the Union's South Gallery. 8:30 p.m. STV will have a meeting for people interested in the production of "General College" in Union's South Gallery.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 16, 1992, edition 1
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