Sljp Satlg (Ear Hrri POLICE ROUNDUP University Thursday, N0v.20 ■ Some narcotics were tampered with, and morphine was stolen from the Student Health Service building, police reports state. A nurse went to check the storage room and discovered the bottle of mor phine empty, reports state. According to police reports, the director of pharmacy told police that she had notified the N.C. Drug Commission and also the State Bureau of Investigation. Wednesday, N0v.19 ■ A Sony microcassette recorder and a box of microcassette recorder tapes belonging to an employee at 440 W. Franklin St. was reported stolen from her desk, police reports state. ■ A cellular phone, battery, adapter and leather case was stolen from a car belonging to a medical center employee, police reports state. According to reports, the car was parked at the first level of the Health Affairs parking deck. Tuesday, Nov.ll ■ A black 19-inch Serotta Colorado ATX mountain bike belonging to a stu dent was reported stolen, police reports state. According to reports, the bike was locked to the bike rack in front of New East Hall. ■ A vehicle belonging to a University employee was vandalized while parked at the fifth level of Craige parking deck, police reports state. According to reports, the car’s front tire was slashed, and the car was scratched. City Thursday, Nov. 20 ■ Shannon D. Green, 23, of 1734 Legion Road, Chapel Hill, was arrested at 1800 E. Franklin St. and taken into custody at the Chapel Hill Police Department, where she submitted to breath tests and scored .10, police reports state. Green was held under a S3OO bond afterbeing charged with one count of speeding and a misdemeanor count of DWI, police reports state. Police reports state she was taken before the magistrate and released under bond. Wednesday, Nov. 19 ■ According to police reports, a Carrboro woman reported the breaking and entering of her car and the larceny of several items in her car. Reports state the incident happened at 503 W. Franklin St. and several items were stolen. A $651 check issued to the victim, boots and a purse. The victim also reported damages to her car, police reports state. ■ David Robert Garrison, 19, of 108 Grady Court, Morehead City, was arrested and charged with a misde meanor count of DWI and a misde meanor count of having an open con tainer, police reports state. Reports state that Garrison was stopped for not wearing a seat belt and that after alcohol was detected, he was arrested. Garrison scored a .06 on breath tests and was held on an unsecured S3OO bond, police reports state. Tuesday, Nov. It ■ Gilverto Lopez Casas, 32, of 2305 Fox Ridge Manor, Raleigh, was arrest ed for one count of felony larceny at University Mall, 201 S. Estes Drive, police reports state. Reports stated that Casas refused to be fingerprinted and had no identifica tion with him, except for an old citation. Casas was held on a $5,000 secured bond, reports state. ■ A narcotics investigation by offi cers led to the arrest of two men, police reports state. Reports state that Robert Allen Poole, 44, of 101 Evans Court, Carrboro, was arrested and charged with a felonious count of possession of crack cocaine. Poole was held on a SI,OOO unse cured bond, and police seized two dosage units of crack cocaine from him, police reports state. Police reports state that Poole was arrested after he purchased two rocks of crack cocaine from Bobby Lee Davis in the dirt lot at the intersection of Rosemary Street and Sunset Drive. Investigators with the narcotics unit observed the transaction and made the arrests, reports state. ■ Bobby Lee Davis, 23, was arrested and charged with a felonious count of selling and delivering crack cocaine, misdemeanor count of possession of marijuana and a misdemeanor count of resisting, delaying and obstructing, police reports state. Reports state that Davis attempted to flee from police and strike the arresting officers. He was held on a $4,000 secured bond, police reports state. Board discusses landfill options ■ County commissioners spoke on the difficulties surrounding the landfill. BY CHRIS ANDREW STAFF WRITER After months of tedious planning for possible waste management scenarios, the Orange County Board of Commissioners faces a key issue of whether it will take on the responsibility of managing the landfill or pass it on to someone else, said Orange County Commissioner Moses Carey Jr. at a pub lic meeting Thursday. “We’ve got to decide who will be responsible for moving it forward, so we Biker pedals for cleaner environment ■ Robb Hirsch is traveling the East Coast to promote environmental awareness. BY MARY-KATHRYN CRAFT FEATURES EDITOR He keeps riding and riding and rid ing. Forrest Gump might have run across the country because he wanted to, but Robb Hirsch has been riding his bike throughout the eastern United States to promote environmental awareness. “I left on Labor Day,” he said as he began to chart his journey. “I started in Long Island, N.Y., and went up to Maine,” said this medium-sized man with an athletic build, wearing a beat-up New York Yankees baseball cap. “I covered New England, the Great Lakes, the Mississippi River, the Gulf Coast, and now I am hitting the Atlantic States,” he said during his brief stop in Chapel Hill on Wednesday. Hirsch, 27, completed his master’s degree in environmental studies last May. He studied in New Zealand on a Fulbright Scholarship and has worked with the U.S. State Department and the National Oceanic Administration. After learning about the condition of the world’s environment, he decided to take action to fight for these issues. “I am circumventing the eastern U.S. by bike to raise interest in the global cli mate issues,” he said. “I am visiting uni versities and communities along the way to encourage people to take a demonstrative stance to reduce fossil fuel consumption.” Tuesday he talked to students at UNC-Charlotte. He then ventured to Chapel Hill where he worked with the Student Environmental Action Coalition and spoke to students at Jane Goodall’s speech at Memorial Hall. Hirsch is getting signatures aon a petition requesting stricter government standards on fossil fuel emission. “People at UNC have been very receptive," Hirsch said about students who attended Goodall’s speech. “Jane Goodall herself signed it. She is such an inspiration.” Early yesterday morning Hirsch hopped on his bike, laden with his daily necessities and took off for Duke University. “That is only 11 or so miles away,” Hirsch said with relief. So far he has traveled more than 5,000 miles and will not stop until reaching his grandparents’ home on Long Island, N.Y., for Thanksgiving. Hirsch plans to take his petition to a demonstration in Washington, D.C., on Monday. Students from all over the United States will take similar petitions to the Senate and State Department. The goal is to persuade government offi cials to take strict environmental requirements to a global conference in Kyoto, Japan, on Dec. 1. "Right now the U.S. offers the lowest bid (for fossil fuel regulations) offered by a developed nation,” Hirsch said. While fighting for a cleaner environ ment, Hirsch has learned all about the country during his journey. Although he often stays with stu dents he meets along the way and some times sets up for the night at camp grounds, he has also been forced to get creative with sleeping arrangements. “I've slept in baseball dugouts,” Hirsch remembered. “I stayed next to a haystack in Arkansas one night. There was the press box at the track-and-field stadium at Florida State. "The best night was under this gaze bo on the Gulf Coast in Florida. The stan were out, and the waves were breaking. I took a morning swim in the ocean.” He said meeting people at a grass roots level was the best part of his trek. “It really keeps me pedaling, meeting students,” he said with a smile while stroking his five o’clock shadow. “I now feel more responsibility to carry on their goodwill.” UNIVERSITY & CITY can take the next step,” Carey said. “I happen to think it should be us.” The county’s original plan to expand the old landfill was foiled Oct. 9, when Duke University revealed it had given the land to NASA as a tract for a research easement. The much debated Interlocal Agreement was also a topic of discus sion Thursday night. Carey said the board should use the agreement or give it to Chapel Hill and let the town act on it. After discussing six basic scenarios for the way to handle the problem of solid waste, Carey said he was ready to move on and make a decision. “All these conditions and stuff that’s a waste of time,” Carey said. One issue on which the board mem HE'S MAKING A LIST AND CHECKING IT TWICE i— ' i DTH.'SEAN BtISHH Sadie Hardin sits in Santa Claus' lap Thursday at the Christmas party Kappa Delta sorority and Kappa Sigma fraternity held for the children in the Oxford Orphanage. Harassment complaints concern administrators, Davis employees BY SEAN ROWE STAFF WRITER A female student’s report of two inci dents of harassment by a stranger at Davis Library ignited concerns about student safety from University Sexual Harassment Officer Judith Scott. The female student, who asked not to be named, said she stayed out of Davis Library for two weeks after a man dressed like a construction worker fol lowed and leered at her on Oct. 23 and Oct. 27. She said she didn’t think report ing the incidents to the circulation desk made a difference. “They all thought it was the biggest joke,” she said. “They said, ’Let’s just treat this as a training exercise.’” Deadline approaching for storage-site decision BY EMILY CRAMER STAFF WRITER Along with peaches and boiled peanuts, South Carolina might soon be sending radioactive wastes across the state line. Facing a December deadline, North Carolina must decide on a location for a new dumpsite. It is North Carolina’s turn to store the southeastern states’ low level radioactive waste, which consists of everything but activated nuclear rods. This requirement follows the demands of the Southeast Compact Commission. “The compact has put a Dec. 1 dead line to come up with a financing plan that will solve the (problem) that faces the licensing work plan,” said Andy James, director of Governmental and External Relations for the N.C. Low- Level Waste Management Authority. “We are trying to prove that the chosen site is suitable.” However, some maintain that the most recent proposed storage site is not the safest. The proposed site, located south of Raleigh, adjacent to the Sharon Harris Nuclear Power Plant, might not be the safest place for the waste, said N.C. Sen. “We’ve got to decide who will be responsible for moving (the landfill) forward, so we can take the next step. 1 happen to think it should be us.” MOSES CAREY JR. Orange County Commissioner bers are basing their decision is the plan’s cost. Hauling and tipping fees could be greater if the board decides to lead the plan, Orange County Commissioner Margaret Brown said. Average hauling and tipping fees range from $31.80 to $52.75, said Orange County Commissioner John “/ think the more informed my office is about incidents like these, the better we can interact with people. ” judith scon Sexual harassment officer She told Scott a man wearing a heavy, red plaid coat and dingy blue jeans sat outside her carrel and stared at her for several minutes while she studied on the fifth floor. The second time, the same man followed her while she was reading at a study desk on the seventh floor. Eleanor Kinnaird, D-Orange. “There is a great deal of doubt as to whether that is an appropriate site because the radioactive waste could run into the area’s water supply,” she said. She also expressed concern about the transportation of the waste on North Carolina’s roadways and explained that the expenditures for relocation would be costly. “Trucking radioactive waste on our highways or roads could be unsafe,” she said. “It is time to stop throwing away money and find another site.” The compact, which includes Virginia, North Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Florida and formerly South Carolina, was cre ated to decrease the number of states contributing wastes to a single site, James said. “The compact circumvents the commerce clause of the constitu tion, so waste from other states can be excluded.” Funding for the project, which has already cost more than SIOO million dol lars, might now be generated by the pri mary producers of the radioactive waste, said Mary McDowell, research coordinator for Chatham Preferred Site See LOW LEVEL, Page 5 Link. “If you think about it in the long run, the cost of recycling and this plan, it could backfire,” Brown said. The economic problem that the cur rent plan outlines was another contro versial topic the board members dis cussed. Orange County Commissioner Alice Gordon said there was a problem with the board trying to eliminate waste and bring in enough waste to meet the fixed costs. “There’s a serious problem,” Gordon said. Economic issues also arose when a few board members began to discuss requiring the taxpayers to pay for recy cling, Gordon said. See SESSION, Page 5 “I was scared because if he had grabbed my legs or something there would have been no one there to help me,” the student said. Scott said she could not speak about the case because that would break her confidentiality with the student. University officials also dismissed two construction workers from campus this semester because of disorderly con duct with two female students, said Susan Kitchen, vice chancellor for Student Affairs. Kitchen said one of the students told her the worker used profane language. The second student said the construc tion worker was purposefully taking too See HARASSMENT, Page 5 CLASS OF 2013 . -i, JHHk W > At ■ DTH/JENNIFER GUTHRIE T.J. Daneker, 6, from Richmond, Va., shoots baskets after the UNC- Richmond game Wednesday. Daneker hopes to attend UNC in the future. Friday, November 21,1997 UNC among first to test new program ■ Anew program to curb hinge drinking will target dilents through media. BY KERRY OSSI STAFF WRITER Continuing a stream of programs tackling alcohol abuse on campus, University administrators announced plans Thursday for a three-year media campaign aimed at changing students’ attitudes toward binge drinking. Chancellor Michael Hooker said UNC and Cornell University would be the first schools to test this program, which targets students through a blitz of print, radio and television advertising. If the campaign proves successful, it could serve as a national model for reducing binge drinking at the universi ty level, Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Susan Kitchen said. Hooker said the incidents of binge drinking at the University were below national average, which a 1996 national sur vey reported as 37 percent. “I don’t think we have a party school reputation that some other schools have,” he said. But several recent alcohol related incidents have drawn atten tion to student drinking at the University. Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs SUSAN KITCHEN said the new program could serve as a national model. A student who had been drinking fell from Winston Residence Hall earlier this semester. And in May 1996, impli cations of alcohol abuse surrounded the death of five students in a Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house fire. Since then, University administrators have stepped up efforts to curb binge drinking and change any party-school image UNC might have gained. The University and Tar Heel Sports Marketing began the “Don’t Get Wasted” campaign this fall to promote responsible drinking at sporting events among people of legal age. Hooker said the campaign led to a decline in binge drinking, evident by fewer numbers of alcohol-related refer rals to counseling and fewer reports of inebriated students on campus. Hooker said the University needed to change the campus culture that made binge drinking socially acceptable and persuade students of its dangers. “This project has the potential to do just that win students over," he said. “If this is something students resist, it will be to no avail." Kitchen said a consultant would start developing the media campaign next spring using data on the University’s binge-drinking incidents as well as input and ideas from students. “We’ve always recognized this will only work with student involvement.” Bill Warren, the student representa tive at Thursday’s press conference and a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, said student involvement would make the project more effective. “Parents, administrators they can all tell us not to drink,” he said. “But when students hear a message they have a part in writing or creating, it makes it a little bit more powerful.” 3