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EDITORIALS SPECTRUM SPORTSCENE Reagan's foreign policy Page 6 Theater Boesman and ines life under Apartheid THECAROLINIAN The Studait Voice of UNCG Thurtday, November 13, 1986 to Volume 66, No. P Cafeteria renovations to continue through 1988 By LAURA BRUST A pizza parlor, delicatesen, ice cream shop and bakery below the cafeteria? Does this sound good to you? Does this sound like UNCG? It will in February 1988, the projected com-pletion date of the extensive renovation project for the university dining services. On Nov. 10, Spartan Cafeteria closed, leaving the entrance below North Dining Hall as the main cafeteria entrance. The project will take an estimated 16 months to complete. The completed renovation of the dining services is scheduled for February 1988. What will happen to student dining services as the building begins to shut down? "We're starting with Spartan, but we won't vacate the building entirely until May," says Charles Moyer, director of dining services. At that point Cone Ballroom will become the main cafeteria for students in both 1987 sessions of sum-mer school. "Cone Ballroon will be the main dining room Mon-day through Friday and we'll use the Soda Shop and Dogwood Room for student dining on the weekends," Moyer says, "considering that there is usually less demand on the weekends." There is a small kitchen off of Cone Ballroom which will help in serving the students during the summer but, "plans have already been made for us to work out of Greensboro College's kitchen," Moyer says. "We'll bring the food over in hot boxes and use the Cone kitchen as a 'support system.'" The main work will be done on the cafeteria dur-ing the summer, Moyer says emphatically. "They're really supposed to go to town between May and August." Moyer says the renovation is needed for the "basic modernization of the equipment and the building.'' Structural work to the building will include a new roof, a new electrical system and water system. Five "fill" areas also will be added between the existing wings to change the shape inside the building. Walls will be knocked down in some areas and add-ed in others, floors will be raised and ceilings will be lowered. There will also be central air condition-ing and wall-to-wall carpeting. "You just won't recognize it when its done," Moyer says. "It won't look like the big old barn' it looks like now." After the renovation is finished, Spencer Cafeteria will become a cash only cafe. State Cafeteria will re-main as the traditional dining room with a serving line and North Cafeteria will be an ajoining dining room without a serving line. Spartan Cafeteria will be converted into the main kitchen. On the bottom floor, there will be a pizza parlor, deli, ice cream shop and bakery under North Cafeteria; a post office under State Cafeteria; meeting rooms for students, faculty and staff organizations under Spencer Cafeteria; a support Spartans take Johns Hopkins 3-0 A shutout victory over Johns Hopkins University in the first round of the 13th NCAA Division HI Soccer Championship has earned the Sparatans a berth in the South Regional final this weekend. The Spartans, now 15-5-0 (wins-losses-ties) overall and ranked No. 4 nationally in Division HI, will host Bethany (W. Va.| College in the regional final Sunday, Nov. 16, at 1:30 p.m. on the campus field. UNCG downed Johns Hopkins 3-0 while Bethany, now 13-4-0 and ranked No. 14 nationally, nipped Christopher Newport College 1-0 in first-round South Regional games Sunday. This weekend's game marks the third straight meeting between UNCG and Bethany for the regional title, and Spartan Coach Michael Parker is cautiously optimistic about the contest. "Our game with Bethany has become quite a rivalry," says Parker, who directed UNCG to its third Division III national title in four years last fall. "It's very important to both teams. Thankfully, we'll have the home field advantage Sunday. "We're playing pretty well, as we should at tournament time," he adds. "I believe Bethany will have to play its best game of the season to beat us." Senior midfielder Ron Bertolaccini of Medford, Mass., scored two second-half goals to propel UNCG to the first-round win. Sophomore midfielder Alvin James of Lauderhill, Fla., notched the final goal of the contest. Senior forward Andrew Mehalko of Hialeah, Fla., became the leading scorer in Division III national tournament history with two assists against Johns Hopkins. Mehalko has 10 goals and 7 assists in 13 tournament games over four seasons. Bethany's leading scorer is junior midfielder Graeme Tanner of Dundas, Canada, who has netted 11 goals and made 9 assists. The Bison goalkeeper, freshman Mark Seeman of Akron, Ohio, has allowed only 10 goals in 17 games and has recorded 10 shutouts. Coach John Cunningham's squad. President's Athletic Conference champion for the 15th time, defeated highly ranked Division II member Davis and Elkins College of Elkins, W. Va., 3-0 in its last regular season game. UNCG, seeking its fifth straight South Regional title, owns three tournament victories over Bethany — 2-1 in the 1982 national final game, and 2-0 in the 1984 and 1985 regional final games - all played in Greensboro. The winner of the South Regional advances with a quarterfinal bye to the national semifinals, scheduled Nov. 21 or 22 at a site to be determined. The South champion meets the winner of a quarterfinal game to be played this weekend between Plymouth (N.H.) State College, the New England Regional champion, and Fredonia (NY.) State Univer-sity, the New York Regional champion. The national final game is set for Nov. 22 or 23. South African withdrawl a victory (CPS) — Anti-apartheid activists on American campuses won major victories this month when a string of corporate giants — General Motors, Honeywell, IBM, Coke and Warner Communications — announced they were pulling out of segregationist South Africa. But the activists say the movement on cam-puses will keep going even after achieving one of its most important goals. "I don't think it will slow down the protests at all," ssys Bill Northway of Stanford Out of Africa. "If anything, it will encourage us." "It is a victory," says Richard Knight of the American Committee on Africa, the New York-based group that has coordinated anti-apartheid efforts on U.S. campuses for years, "and it is important to realize it is a victory. But I don't think protests will slow down at all." If events this month were any indication, the movement may grow even more confrontative, especially at campuses that refuse to sell more or all of the their shares in firms that do business in South Africa. Polios, for example, arrested 40 Wellesley students for trespassing during a demonstra-tion about the school's failure to divest. Even as Stanford's trustees voted to sell of another $4.5 million in shares in two companies doing business in South Africa, about 125 protestors rallied for "total divestment." Austin police, moreover, arrested 16 anti-apartheid demonstrators at a sit-in at Univer-sity of Texas President William Cunningham's Some schools noted that, in light of the South Africa exodus of the blue-chip companies, their holdings in apartheid-related firms had fallen without their having sold a share. David Swensen, who heads Yale's invest-ment office, announced that, since Yale had "substantial holdings" in IBM, Coca-Cola and GM, "there will be a rather dramatic drop in our South Africa-related holding*." And University of Vermont Treasurer Gor-don Paterson said Vermont may "reconsider" its earlier decision to sell its IBM stock in light of IBM's withdrawal. No one really knows how much American schools' investment in firms that do business in South Africa fell as a result of the corporate exodus. American colleges already have sold about $600 million — out of a total investment of $7 billion - in stock in firms that do business in South Africa, reports Anne Griffin of the In-vestor Responsibility Research Center (IRRC), a Washington, D.C., group that tracks the South African operations of U.S. firms. But Griffin says it's too early to calculate just how much less in South African investments the schools will have because of the corporate withdrawals. However, activist* say it doesn't matter. Yale anti-apartheid leader Matthew Kimble Cromises his group's activities will continue at last until the school divests completely. "This is purely speculation on my part," says Griffin, whose group does not take a stand for or against divestiture, "but I don't think the protests will slow down." She adds an IRRC study about to be releas-ed shows most schools that have not yet divested plan to maintain the "conservative" investment policies — either keeping their •tock or pressuring firms to treat their black Continued on page 10 Researcher warns against new law Says Meese Report is politics By RALPH SPEAS Charging the Meese Commission on Pornography with being a political manifesto rather than a scientific study. Dr. John Money, director of the Psychohormona'. Research Unit of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, spoke to an audience of more than 100 on Nov. 6 in Elliott Center at the regular meeting of Citizens Against Censorship. Following his afternoon talk on gender studies to the UNCG Psychology Department, Money warned his audience, comprised of area medical school faculty members and students and others, that authoritarian elements in contemporary American society are reac-ting irrationally to the real threat of violence against ourselves. Using slides throughout the evening, Money first traced the history of Nszi persecution of social scientists, particularly professional sex-ologists, in pre-WWII Europe. In the name of sacrifice of personal freedoms for the greater good, people stood by and watched their neighbors imprisoned or sent away to simply disappear, he said; case histories, books and journals were taken into the streets and burned; and newspapers reported that those opposed to the Nazi*, especially sexologists, were "por-nographers. homosexuals and Jews." Censorship was a major tool used to keep the general populace in ignorance of the tactics being used. Money said, and there soon came a day of reckoning when the Germans woke up one morning to find themselves enslaved by fascism. Money warned his audience that if they didn't do something more rational, a similar fate awaited them. "I think it's about time we woke up and realized what's going on around us," Money said. Citing the increasing prevalence of blaming the victim for the Continued on page II Collins to deliver hunger lecture Dr. Joseph Collins—popular speaker, author and founder of the Institute for Food and Development Policy—will give a talk on world hunger and its causes on Tuesday, Nov. 18, at UNCG. Collins will give an hour lec-ture, entitled "Beyond the Myths of Hunger," at 12:30 p.m. at Elliott University Center in the Alexander Room. The talk is free and open to the public. Collins is known for his diligent efforts to change the interna-tional understanding of the causes of hunger and to debunk what he calls "hunger myths." Hunger is caused not by scarci-ty, overpopulation and malevolence, he says, but by in creasing concentration of control over food-producing resources. "As Americans concerned about our responsibilities to the increasing numbers of the hungry, we should see that our work not be to reform aid," he said. "We have a prior task—to awaken our fellow citizens to s different understanding of our national interest; that it i* not served but undermined by policies that shore up repressive Collias government* against the demands for change by their own hungry." A Catholic schoolboy and missionary-in-training in the late 1960s and early 1960s, Collins Sent his summer* working with sryknoll Collage parish priest* in Latin America and Southeast Asia. "I began to see how all of our lives are interconnected," be said. "I decided I wanted to help Continued on page 10
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | The Carolinian [November 13, 1986] |
Date | 1986-11-13 |
Editor/creator | Brown,Greg |
Subject headings |
University of North Carolina at Greensboro--Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals-- North Carolina--Greensboro Student publications--North Carolina--Greensboro Student activities--North Carolina--History |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The November 13, 1986, issue of The Carolinian, the student newspaper of The University of North Carolina at Greensboro. |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : The University of North Carolina at Greensboro |
Language | eng |
Contributing institution | Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives, UNCG University Libraries |
Publication | The Carolinian |
Rights statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Additional rights information | NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material. |
Object ID | 1986-11-13-carolinian |
Date digitized | 2011 |
Digital publisher | The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries |
Digitized by | Creekside Digital |
Sponsor | Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation |
OCLC number | 871559543 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text | EDITORIALS SPECTRUM SPORTSCENE Reagan's foreign policy Page 6 Theater Boesman and ines life under Apartheid THECAROLINIAN The Studait Voice of UNCG Thurtday, November 13, 1986 to Volume 66, No. P Cafeteria renovations to continue through 1988 By LAURA BRUST A pizza parlor, delicatesen, ice cream shop and bakery below the cafeteria? Does this sound good to you? Does this sound like UNCG? It will in February 1988, the projected com-pletion date of the extensive renovation project for the university dining services. On Nov. 10, Spartan Cafeteria closed, leaving the entrance below North Dining Hall as the main cafeteria entrance. The project will take an estimated 16 months to complete. The completed renovation of the dining services is scheduled for February 1988. What will happen to student dining services as the building begins to shut down? "We're starting with Spartan, but we won't vacate the building entirely until May," says Charles Moyer, director of dining services. At that point Cone Ballroom will become the main cafeteria for students in both 1987 sessions of sum-mer school. "Cone Ballroon will be the main dining room Mon-day through Friday and we'll use the Soda Shop and Dogwood Room for student dining on the weekends," Moyer says, "considering that there is usually less demand on the weekends." There is a small kitchen off of Cone Ballroom which will help in serving the students during the summer but, "plans have already been made for us to work out of Greensboro College's kitchen," Moyer says. "We'll bring the food over in hot boxes and use the Cone kitchen as a 'support system.'" The main work will be done on the cafeteria dur-ing the summer, Moyer says emphatically. "They're really supposed to go to town between May and August." Moyer says the renovation is needed for the "basic modernization of the equipment and the building.'' Structural work to the building will include a new roof, a new electrical system and water system. Five "fill" areas also will be added between the existing wings to change the shape inside the building. Walls will be knocked down in some areas and add-ed in others, floors will be raised and ceilings will be lowered. There will also be central air condition-ing and wall-to-wall carpeting. "You just won't recognize it when its done," Moyer says. "It won't look like the big old barn' it looks like now." After the renovation is finished, Spencer Cafeteria will become a cash only cafe. State Cafeteria will re-main as the traditional dining room with a serving line and North Cafeteria will be an ajoining dining room without a serving line. Spartan Cafeteria will be converted into the main kitchen. On the bottom floor, there will be a pizza parlor, deli, ice cream shop and bakery under North Cafeteria; a post office under State Cafeteria; meeting rooms for students, faculty and staff organizations under Spencer Cafeteria; a support Spartans take Johns Hopkins 3-0 A shutout victory over Johns Hopkins University in the first round of the 13th NCAA Division HI Soccer Championship has earned the Sparatans a berth in the South Regional final this weekend. The Spartans, now 15-5-0 (wins-losses-ties) overall and ranked No. 4 nationally in Division HI, will host Bethany (W. Va.| College in the regional final Sunday, Nov. 16, at 1:30 p.m. on the campus field. UNCG downed Johns Hopkins 3-0 while Bethany, now 13-4-0 and ranked No. 14 nationally, nipped Christopher Newport College 1-0 in first-round South Regional games Sunday. This weekend's game marks the third straight meeting between UNCG and Bethany for the regional title, and Spartan Coach Michael Parker is cautiously optimistic about the contest. "Our game with Bethany has become quite a rivalry," says Parker, who directed UNCG to its third Division III national title in four years last fall. "It's very important to both teams. Thankfully, we'll have the home field advantage Sunday. "We're playing pretty well, as we should at tournament time," he adds. "I believe Bethany will have to play its best game of the season to beat us." Senior midfielder Ron Bertolaccini of Medford, Mass., scored two second-half goals to propel UNCG to the first-round win. Sophomore midfielder Alvin James of Lauderhill, Fla., notched the final goal of the contest. Senior forward Andrew Mehalko of Hialeah, Fla., became the leading scorer in Division III national tournament history with two assists against Johns Hopkins. Mehalko has 10 goals and 7 assists in 13 tournament games over four seasons. Bethany's leading scorer is junior midfielder Graeme Tanner of Dundas, Canada, who has netted 11 goals and made 9 assists. The Bison goalkeeper, freshman Mark Seeman of Akron, Ohio, has allowed only 10 goals in 17 games and has recorded 10 shutouts. Coach John Cunningham's squad. President's Athletic Conference champion for the 15th time, defeated highly ranked Division II member Davis and Elkins College of Elkins, W. Va., 3-0 in its last regular season game. UNCG, seeking its fifth straight South Regional title, owns three tournament victories over Bethany — 2-1 in the 1982 national final game, and 2-0 in the 1984 and 1985 regional final games - all played in Greensboro. The winner of the South Regional advances with a quarterfinal bye to the national semifinals, scheduled Nov. 21 or 22 at a site to be determined. The South champion meets the winner of a quarterfinal game to be played this weekend between Plymouth (N.H.) State College, the New England Regional champion, and Fredonia (NY.) State Univer-sity, the New York Regional champion. The national final game is set for Nov. 22 or 23. South African withdrawl a victory (CPS) — Anti-apartheid activists on American campuses won major victories this month when a string of corporate giants — General Motors, Honeywell, IBM, Coke and Warner Communications — announced they were pulling out of segregationist South Africa. But the activists say the movement on cam-puses will keep going even after achieving one of its most important goals. "I don't think it will slow down the protests at all," ssys Bill Northway of Stanford Out of Africa. "If anything, it will encourage us." "It is a victory," says Richard Knight of the American Committee on Africa, the New York-based group that has coordinated anti-apartheid efforts on U.S. campuses for years, "and it is important to realize it is a victory. But I don't think protests will slow down at all." If events this month were any indication, the movement may grow even more confrontative, especially at campuses that refuse to sell more or all of the their shares in firms that do business in South Africa. Polios, for example, arrested 40 Wellesley students for trespassing during a demonstra-tion about the school's failure to divest. Even as Stanford's trustees voted to sell of another $4.5 million in shares in two companies doing business in South Africa, about 125 protestors rallied for "total divestment." Austin police, moreover, arrested 16 anti-apartheid demonstrators at a sit-in at Univer-sity of Texas President William Cunningham's Some schools noted that, in light of the South Africa exodus of the blue-chip companies, their holdings in apartheid-related firms had fallen without their having sold a share. David Swensen, who heads Yale's invest-ment office, announced that, since Yale had "substantial holdings" in IBM, Coca-Cola and GM, "there will be a rather dramatic drop in our South Africa-related holding*." And University of Vermont Treasurer Gor-don Paterson said Vermont may "reconsider" its earlier decision to sell its IBM stock in light of IBM's withdrawal. No one really knows how much American schools' investment in firms that do business in South Africa fell as a result of the corporate exodus. American colleges already have sold about $600 million — out of a total investment of $7 billion - in stock in firms that do business in South Africa, reports Anne Griffin of the In-vestor Responsibility Research Center (IRRC), a Washington, D.C., group that tracks the South African operations of U.S. firms. But Griffin says it's too early to calculate just how much less in South African investments the schools will have because of the corporate withdrawals. However, activist* say it doesn't matter. Yale anti-apartheid leader Matthew Kimble Cromises his group's activities will continue at last until the school divests completely. "This is purely speculation on my part," says Griffin, whose group does not take a stand for or against divestiture, "but I don't think the protests will slow down." She adds an IRRC study about to be releas-ed shows most schools that have not yet divested plan to maintain the "conservative" investment policies — either keeping their •tock or pressuring firms to treat their black Continued on page 10 Researcher warns against new law Says Meese Report is politics By RALPH SPEAS Charging the Meese Commission on Pornography with being a political manifesto rather than a scientific study. Dr. John Money, director of the Psychohormona'. Research Unit of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, spoke to an audience of more than 100 on Nov. 6 in Elliott Center at the regular meeting of Citizens Against Censorship. Following his afternoon talk on gender studies to the UNCG Psychology Department, Money warned his audience, comprised of area medical school faculty members and students and others, that authoritarian elements in contemporary American society are reac-ting irrationally to the real threat of violence against ourselves. Using slides throughout the evening, Money first traced the history of Nszi persecution of social scientists, particularly professional sex-ologists, in pre-WWII Europe. In the name of sacrifice of personal freedoms for the greater good, people stood by and watched their neighbors imprisoned or sent away to simply disappear, he said; case histories, books and journals were taken into the streets and burned; and newspapers reported that those opposed to the Nazi*, especially sexologists, were "por-nographers. homosexuals and Jews." Censorship was a major tool used to keep the general populace in ignorance of the tactics being used. Money said, and there soon came a day of reckoning when the Germans woke up one morning to find themselves enslaved by fascism. Money warned his audience that if they didn't do something more rational, a similar fate awaited them. "I think it's about time we woke up and realized what's going on around us," Money said. Citing the increasing prevalence of blaming the victim for the Continued on page II Collins to deliver hunger lecture Dr. Joseph Collins—popular speaker, author and founder of the Institute for Food and Development Policy—will give a talk on world hunger and its causes on Tuesday, Nov. 18, at UNCG. Collins will give an hour lec-ture, entitled "Beyond the Myths of Hunger," at 12:30 p.m. at Elliott University Center in the Alexander Room. The talk is free and open to the public. Collins is known for his diligent efforts to change the interna-tional understanding of the causes of hunger and to debunk what he calls "hunger myths." Hunger is caused not by scarci-ty, overpopulation and malevolence, he says, but by in creasing concentration of control over food-producing resources. "As Americans concerned about our responsibilities to the increasing numbers of the hungry, we should see that our work not be to reform aid," he said. "We have a prior task—to awaken our fellow citizens to s different understanding of our national interest; that it i* not served but undermined by policies that shore up repressive Collias government* against the demands for change by their own hungry." A Catholic schoolboy and missionary-in-training in the late 1960s and early 1960s, Collins Sent his summer* working with sryknoll Collage parish priest* in Latin America and Southeast Asia. "I began to see how all of our lives are interconnected," be said. "I decided I wanted to help Continued on page 10 |
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