TV- 4The Daily Tar HeelWednesday, March 22, 1989 State plan's breakwater constructs op By SANDY WALL Staff Writer Recent storms have forced state officials to proceed with plans to build a $15 million to $20 million breakwater to protect the Herbert C. Bonner Bridge to Hatteras Island from continuing erosion. The land that supports the south ern abutment of the bridge has been eroding steadily and is in danger of completely washing away because of recent storms. The breakwater will shield the land from the tide. The bridge, which spans Oregon Inlet and carries N.C. Highway 12, is the only link between Hatteras Island and the mainland. "It's been eroding for 10 years," said Don Follmer, director of public affairs for the N.C. Department of Natural Resources. A breakwater would be a way to save the bridge and stabilize the south-progressing inlet. The proposed breakwater (or Chapel Hill may get Soviet sister city By NICOLLE SKALSKI Staff Writer A committee appointed by Mayor Jonathan Howes has chosen Tartu, a small college town in the Soviet Union, as a possible sister city to Chapel Hill. About five or six years ago, the committee was formed by local citizens who were interested in getting involved on the local level to improve East-West relations, said committee member Dirk Spruyt. The committee consists of about 12 active members who meet once a month to work on the project, Spruyt said. The program is being sponsored by Sister Cities International, which is based in Washington, D.C. The mayor's committee is working through this organization to find a sister city, he said. "The program will allow people here to understand the cultural diversity in the Soviet Union," said Jaan Valsiner, a psychology professor at UNC-CH who taught at Tartu University until he left the Soviet Union in 1980. "It will be very beneficial to both sides." Spruyt said it was difficult to find a city similar to Chapel Hill because Are now available for your EDUCATION IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN RECEIVING Scholarships, Fellowships, Grants YOUR ELIGIBILITY IS GUARANTEED! regardless of financial status or academic performance. FOR MORE A NATIONAL These funds DO NOT ACADEMIC FINANCIAL 0 fs . GET THE INSIDE PICTURE LOOK INTO A RADIOLOGIC SCIENCE DEGREE Diagnostic Radiography CT Scanning "Vascular Imaging "Mammography "Nuclear Medicine "Magnetic Resonance Imaging "Ultrasound "Radiation Cr v Therapy "MORE, MORE, MORE!! Many career options are available through the B.S. degree program in Radiologic Science. Call 966-5146 for more information. This may be the degree you've been looking for! groin) would be a rock structure extending 500 to 1,000 feet into the ocean and would stop the erosion along the southern end of the bridge, said George Wells, highway admin istrator of the N.C. Department of Transportation (DOT). "At risk is N.C. Highway 12 where it ties onto the bridge," he said. "The groin will allow the natural buildup of sand and beach which will restore (the land)." The groin proposal was one recom mendation from a task force of engineers and marine experts appointed by the DOT in 1988 to study possible solutions for the erosion problem at the bridge, Wells said. The task force reported in August 1988 that the groin would be the most viable solution to the problem and predicted the area could wait 10 years before construction would be heeded, he said. But recent storms and normal most European universities are located in large metropolitan areas. Tartu is the closest match to Chapel Hill because it is a small university town, Spruyt said. "Tartu is a cosmopolitan town with a broad-minded point of view," he said. "This was why we were more attracted to it." The town also has a strong interest in basketball and a strong historic and cultural background much like Chapel Hill, Spruyt said. Valsiner said Tartu is a town of about 100,000 people, of whom over one-half are linked to one of the two universities in Tartu, Tartu University and an agricultural college. David Griffiths, a member of the OWASA to By TOM PARKS Staff Writer Orange County Water and Sewer Authority (OWASA) will soon begin installing a new water main along Estes Drive, OWASA's chief engineer said. Chief Engineer Wayne Munden said construction is scheduled to INFORMATION CALL: 1-800-283-8328 SERVICE COMMITTED TO HIGHER EDUCATION require reimbursement ADVISORY PROGRAM Iff MM mm i' g . I I r w erosion have made the project an immediate necessity, Wells said. "The recent two storms did exten sive erosion," he said. "An emergency exists right now." N.C. Gov. Jim Martin met Mon day with U.S. Interior Secretary Manuel Lujon to emphasize the importance and urgency of addres sing the Bonner Bridge problem, Wells said. The Department of the Interior must approve construction of the groin because the land the bridge rests on is part of the federally-owned Pea Island Wildlife Refuge, he said. A decision from the secretary could come within the next two days, said Tom Wilson, a spokesman for the Department of the Interior in Washington. If approved, the groin would be a joint project of the state and federal governments, Wells said, adding that the state will seek the assistance and advice of the U.S. Army Corps of mayor's committee, said Chapel Hill and Tartu are model university towns. "Tartu is one of the oldest and best universities in the Soviet Union," Griffiths said. Although Tartu is only a possible candidate and the committee is still in its negotiating and decision making stages, the committee would like to see Chapel Hill linked with Tartu, Spruyt said. The program is now working at two levels, he said. "On one level the committee is working to get better information on who we are and what we represent." On another level, Sister Cities International is contacting their counterparts in Moscow to find out install Estes begin this week as soon as weather permits and work on the 16-inch main should be completed by late July. The construction will take place on Estes Drive between Airport Road and Franklin Street, Munden said. Two-way traffic will continue during "peak traffic hours" while the main is being laid, he said. Peak hours are from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. and from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. During the day, the eastbound lane of traffic will be diverted through the Estes Hills subdivision, Munden said. The current main is being replaced because of its age and problems with the main over the past few years, he said. "WeVe had numerous line leaks on Estes Drive," Munden said. OWASA will try to complete the project as soon as possible because the N.C. Department of Transporta tion has scheduled Estes Drive for The Nation's Largest Publisher of Campus Telephone Directories r T E UiOLD CONNECTION b UVULrQ ) y y y y selected items MARCH 1731 Hundreds of Selected Items DON'T MISS IT! A f -n -t rrri vuvjvu' i Engineers. Money from the N.C. highway fund would enable the state to pay for the construction of the project as well as reimburse the Corps of Engineers for any assistance they may give, he said. The groin can work and any funds for it would be money well spent, Follmer said. "They (similar breakwater pro jects) can be effective," he said. "Of course when you're dealing with the tide and the weather, you never know. It's still cheaper than a new bridge." Projects similar to the proposed Hatteras project have been successful in North Carolina before, said Tom Jarrett, a former member of the DOT task force and currently chief of coastal engineering for the Wilming ton Branch of the Army Corps of Engineers. "It would be very sirhiliar to a structure at Fort Macon State Park," he said. if Tartu would be interested in Chapel Hill, he said. Carrboro is also interested in joining Chapel Hill to match with Tartu, Spruyt said. One of the criteria set by Sister Cities International is" a certain city size, and the addition of Carrboro will help meet this criterion, he said. The mayor, the town council and the committee will be involved in making a final decision, Spruyt said. The committee would like as wide a group as possible to be involved in making a final choice, he.said. "We would like it so people from all walks of life in Chapel Hill can find counterparts there (in Tartu)," Spruyt said. water main resurfacing in August, he said. OWASA is also working on its preliminary budget for the next fiscal year. On March 6, the Chapel Hill Town Council recommended that OWASA make presentations this spring to the council and other local government bodies to increase awareness of OWASA's budget. The budget will be presented for discussion at an April 12 meeting of OWASA's Board of Directors. The board is scheduled to vote on the budget during a meeting on April 27. According to a memo from Town Manager David Taylor, the recom mendation was made in response to a request from Everett Billingsley, the executive director of OWASA. In a letter dated Feb. 13, Billingsley requested comments from the council about OWASA's budget process. GRADUATING? LOOKING FOR AN OPPORTUNITY? Work with the Nation's Largest Publisher of Campus Telephone Directories. NEED EXPERIENCE? Gain Valuable Computer Knowledge, Graphic Design and Layout Experience, and Learn All Administrative Aspects of Creating Quality Publications. WANT MORE INFORMATION? See Detailed Brochure at Career Planning and Placement Office. Interviewing on Campus: Tuesday, March 28 Wednesday, March 29 Sign-up: Career Planning & Placement 211 Hanes Hall . ma I QDGPI? ttrt r r .i.it cm. m.o t. ricuuuiu si. it 3 O On-cam pus center provided for off-campus N.D. students GRAND FORKS, N.D. University of North Dakota stu dents who live off campus now have an exclusive on-campus Student Life Center which was opened to give them interaction with other off-campus residents: "WeVe been concerned for a long time that commuter students really aren't experiencing what college life is all about," said Gail Baker, adviser to Students Living Off-Campus, a group which helped organize the center. The center opened in a vacant room of the student union. It is currently furnished with tables and chairs, and plans for the addition of a peer counseling center, a quiet lounge and a small kitchenette are in the making. Alcohol ban on campuses HARTFORD, Conn. A Connecticut legislator has intro duced a bill to Connecticut's House which would ban alcoholic . beverages from state colleges. Rep. Edith Prague said her bill prohibiting the sale, distribution and consumption of alcohol on Connecticut's public campuses is warranted by a rise in alcohol abuse among students. "Alcohol abuse by the youth today is a major problem that cannot be ignored," she told Collegiate Press Service. Prague said there is too much emphasis on drinking in college today. Computer talks to the blind ATHENS, Ga. A computer accessory that talks has made academic life easier for visually impaired students at the Univer sity of Georgia. Congress Beasley said. The expense accounts operate like checking accounts, and the organi zation cannot spend money where none has been allocated. It places a spending limit on each account. With the present budget process, which is based on a fiscal year, organizations assume they have the entire amount the congress told them they can spend, but their balances are not based on any real cash holdings, Beasley said. Congress may tell an organization it can spend $1,000 in a year but only give it $500, with the other $500 coming from the organization's own efforts, Beasley said. The organiza tion then spends $100 and thinks it has $900 left when it only has $400, he said. In the past, only the Student Activities Fund Office (SAFO) has known exactly how much money each organization has. The new system will not alter operations for any constitutionally funded organization nor for any groups with 100 percent student government funding, such as the Judicial Branch and Student Legal Services. The new system would also prevent the congress from having too strong an impact on organizations V pur poses, Beasley said. University Square Chapel Hill 967-8935 "Bra D with purchase of 9 or 18 hole green fees with this ad through April 30, 1989 (weekdays only) Limit 18 holes per person per day lo-hole Public Course n Complete Line of Golf Equipment n Driving Range Lessons Available q D D D D outljtotc Golf Across the Campuses The system, which translates software into speech through a voice synthesizer, is designed to help visually-impaired students . with papers and other coursework. Besides speaking to its user, the computer is also capable of mak ing a Braille print-out of material needed for further study. The University of Georgia has six legally blind students and about 20 who are visually impaired, handicap services coun selor Diane Shimkets told Geor gia's campus newspaper. The system was funded by money from the university's CoU lege of Arts and Sciences and Student Affairs. Texas law targets pay-for-play AUSTIN, Texas The Texas state Senate has passed legislation which will prosecute recruiters and. student athletes who participate in illegal pay-for-play transactions Anyone found making gratui-' tous offers to student athletes in exchange for their athletic partic-' ipation could be charged with a third-degree felony. Any student athlete who accepts the gifts could face Class A misdemeanor charges. A third-degree felony convic-' tion carries a two- to 10-year jail ' term and or a maximum fine of $5,000. Class A misdemeanors carry a one-year maximum jail sentence and or a fine not to exceed $2,000. compiled by Karen Dunn. from page 1 "The current budget process oper ates well, but there is a tendency for congress to influence and control the programs of organizations through student government funding, and this can adversely affect the organization's campus character and ability to stimulate interest among members," he said. The Student Congress Finance Committee will only make hypothet-1 ical deductions to arrive at a Student Government appropriation amount. Actual expense cutting will not be done unless the budget category violates a Jav or the organization consents to the committee's decision. During -the final budget hearing, the congress and the organization will determine the accounts to which cash will be allocated. Student Congress Rules and Judi ciary Chairman Gene Davis (Dist. 16) said the proposal would benefit all students. : The proposal will come before the Rules and Judiciary Committee Monday. If the committee passes the proposal, it will be sent to the full congress March 29. Because the amendments within the proposal call for a bylaws change, however, the proposal cannot come to a vote until the 71st congress convenes on April 5, and it would, not take effect until spring 1990. D D D D Directions; FromNC 54ByPasstake Jones Ferry Rd. to Old Greensboro Rd. 12.5 ' miles to NC 87. Turn right on NC 87 (north) for 9 jr m0m tmmm ,mmmmmTSKtBSS n a n a a n D a til C C I Y Q miles to blinking light. VUUIOC jurn right for i 2 miies on Boywood Rd. to sign. Call for 3?ee Slme 42,' ooaoaooaQODoaaaaaaoaa