®bv Hath} ®ar Uni * - Busin f SB 105 years of editorial freedom Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Council Passes Aggressive Panhandling Law A resolution also requested that habitual offenders of the ordinance not be fed at the IFC shelter's kitchen. Bv Alyson Pefry Staff Writer After months of discussion, the Chapel Hill Town Council adopted an ordinance Monday night prohibiting aggressive panhandling downtown. “It’s important for the council to pass this in order to improve the general atmosphere in Chapel Hill,” Mayor Rosemary Waldorf said. The ordinance calls for an end to aggressive beg ging and panhan dling in all public places, as well as simple panhan dling near banks, ATMs, public buses, bus stops, roadways and on medians. Aggressive panhandling is I jjjj— ”■ Chapel Hill Mayor Rosemary Waldorf said the ordinance would help improve the town's overall atmosphere. defined in the ordinance as intimidating or accosting someone else while asking for money or other valuables. This means the aggressive panhandler is threatening physical violence. The ordinance was accompanied by a resolution requesting that the Inter Faith Council establish rules regarding its community kitchen. Habitual offenders of the new pan handling ordinance and existing state laws might not be allowed to eat at the IFC Community Kitchen if the IFC complies with the resolution. Young Boy's Body Discovered in Mebane Field The child was determined to be a white or Hispanic boy who had been dead for about four months. By Mali Leclercq Assistant City Editor The Orange County Sheriffs Department is searching for the identi ty of a young boy whose body was dis covered Monday by a man mowing grass along Industrial Drive in Mebane. County sheriffs report that the body, which was found 100 feet from the road near a billboard, was that of a 10-to-12 j 4 wk v JKp n % t*/* •* ||||p # S S* ' v ’ -.'f 3 DTH/JENNIFER GUTHRIE Carrboro resident Rob Noti repairs a bicycle Monday afternoon at Franklin Street Cycles. Noti started riding when he was 12 years old and never stopped, he said. Fie has been working at Franklin Street Cycles for almost two years. But IFC officials were reluctant to agree. “I don’t want the blame for this prob lem to be laid at the feet of the Inter- Faith Council,” said Rita Gray, presi dent of the board of directors of the IFC. “In discussing it with Mayor Waldorf, we came to the conclusion that it’s a community problem, not just an IFC problem, so we wanted to work togeth er,” she said. Chapel Hill Police Chief Ralph Pendergraph said the ordinance could mean that residents and visitors will enjoy a less threatening atmosphere downtown. Pendergraph said he did not plan to increase police presence downtown because of the ordinance. Police do not want the courts to be flooded with criminals because of the ordinance, he said. But the ordinance may have legal implications because it prohibits simple panhandling in some places without specifying the use of physical force. Deborah Ross, executive director of the North Carolina affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union, said this might be unconstitutional. “You can’t prohibit asking other peo ple for money, but you can prohibit physical violence,” she said. Some community members said they doubted the ordinance would be as effective as other possible measures. Top of the Hill restaurant owner Scott Maitland suggested positioning dona tion boxes for the IFC on downtown streets, so people have the opportunity to give to a less aggressive cause. “Let’s not talk about aggressive pan handling, let’s just become better at beg ging than (panhandlers) are,” he said. The City Editor can be reached at citydesk@unc.edu. year-old white or Hispanic child. No cause of death had been deter mined late Monday, sheriff’s depart ment Major Don Truelove said. The body was fully decomposed and had been at the scene for about four months, he said. “There was no detectable blood on the clothing or shoes.” The investigators were unable to detect indications of any obvious trauma at the scene. A pair of brown shorts with Fox Polo Club inscribed on the inside label were found on the body, reports state. Black and white athletic shoes in a size three with “ZXS” stamped on the heels were also found on the body, FINE TUNING Tuesday, September 29, 1998 Volume 106, Issue 86 \ 1 DTH/JENNIFER GUTHRIE Lendale McCall, who is homeless, watches passersby as he sits along Franklin Street on Monday afternoon. While some people ignore McCall, he said quite a few help him out as well. Colleges, Businesses Split on Problem's Severity Bv Couktnev Hathaway Staff Writer While Chapel Hill took action against aggressive panhandling Monday, offi cials from other college towns across the country said their problems were mini mal. “It gets to be bothersome, but it’s not reports state. No shirt or other clothing was found in the area around the body. Truelove said there were no reports of missing children in the area who fit the description of the body. The sheriffs department has sent out information about the remains to authorities across the state and to state and national missing children agencies. After sheriff’s deputies arrived at the scene Friday, the remains were collect ed and taken to the Orange County Medical Examiner’s office, Truelove said. The skeleton contained dental evi dence that will help identify the child, reports state. Bed is the poor man's opera. Italian proverb a big problem,” said Joe Walters, the sergeant of crime prevention in Athens, home of the University of Georgia. Walters said recent actions taken by the police department had helped alle viate panhandling-related concerns. But such measures have not calmed business owners who say the problems affect the appeal of the area. The dental work could have been provided by a private dentist or the health department, and investigators will try to match the evidence with den tal records of children reported missing on the state and national level, Truelove said. However, making a match could take several months, Truelove said. If the dental records do not match those of other missing children, identi fication of the body would be difficult, he said. “We have to take records of people not accounted for and try to compare their dental make-ups with the remains,” he said. Friday’s discovery was the first time Tuition Plan To Make Rates More Consistent The Board of Governors' tuition task force called for smaller, more incremental increases in student tuition. By Keith Taylor Staff Writer The Board of Governor’s Tuition Policy Task Force met Monday to dis cuss a proposal on tuition reform, which will probably take effect next year. Members of the task force, which formed in response to student concerns about inconsistant tuition hikes, dis cussed clarifying the Tuition Policy report and the need to emphasize finan cial aid and slower rises in tuition costs. Task force member Katherine Kraft said most students would probably pre fer small, consistent tuition increases over large, occasional increases. “It is much easier for students to plan for consistent increases,” she said. Smaller tuition increases could pre vent large tuition hikes like the one enacted in August 1997 that cost out-of state students over SSOO more per semester. In November, the task force will pre- “It’s absolutely atrocious,” said Will Oldham, an employee at Wuxtry Records, a store located on College Avenue, UGa.’s equivalent to Franklin Street. “It makes the area look really ter rible.” Katherine Speck, a senior at UGa., See PANHANDLING, Page 4 an unidentified body had been found in Orange County in eight years, Truelove said. In Sept. 1990, the decomposed body of a woman was found near Interstate 40, but investigators were unable to identify the remains. “(The woman’s body) was not decomposed to the state of the (child’s) body,” Truelove said. Industrial Drive runs parallel to Interstate 40 and 85. The body was found near the inter section of Industrial Drive and Mattress Factor)' Road. The City Editor can be reached at citydesk@unc.edu. sent its report to the BOG. If approved, the BOG will then pro pose new tuition rates for each year to the General Assembly, UNC-system President Molly Broad said. Task force chairman Gary Barnes said task force members believed the BOG would address the financial needs of students better than the state legisla ture. The board has much more knowl edge of what students face financially because they are charged with govern ing the UNC system, he said. Broad said the plan would help clar ify the cost of attending system schools. “It will give students and their fami lies an assurance that undergraduate tuition rates will stay low,” she said. The N.C. General Assembly previ ously set the cost of tuition based on how much money remained in their budget, Bames said. “I think that’s had several unforeseen consequences,” he said. He said those consequences included the increase of tuition faster than the growth of per capita personal income. Because the legislature had set stu dent tuition before, students were forced See TUITION, Page 4 News/Features/Arts/Sports 962-0245 Business/Advertising 962-1163 Chapel Hill, North Carolina © 1998 DTH Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Registering For Classes To Hit Web About one-fourth of seniors could register for spring classes through the Internet to test anew online system. By Katie Abel Staff Writer On-line class registration may be a reality as soon as next semester if trials with the new system are successful. The first trial run, which will take place Oct. 12, will involve student gov ernment cabinet members, Student Body Secretary' Minesh Patel said. “If the trial with the cabinet is suc cessful, then a higher volume of stu dents will be part of a second trial.” Patel said about 1,500 seniors who have the Oct. 24 registration date would have an opportunity to register for classes on the Web between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on Oct. 23. The University’s Student Information Systems Committee made World Wide Web registration a priority last spring. “They pushed it really hard and have done a lot of work in a short amount of time,” said Sally Chadboum, informa tion technology chairwoman for student government. The University’s last attempt at reg istering students on-line has its prob lems. The Department of University Housing’s backed down from its plan to have students register on the Web last spring after students had trouble access ing the Web site. Officials at the Department of University Housing had to extend the housing request deadline to allow all students the opportunity' to register. But Chadboum said the trials would help determine what would be techni cally possible for the on-line system. “Our first concern right now is mak ing sure this service will really be a ben efit to students,” she said. The on-line service will not be avail able to these seniors on Saturday or Sunday during the normal registration period, Chadboum said. She said seniors participating in the trials would be asked to complete a sur vey that will consist of eight questions examining the Web site’s accessibility, whether “drop/add” functions work and the time it takes to register. Chadboum stressed that the experi mental trials were optional for students. Associate University Registrar Donna Redmon said seniors would be See ONLINE, Page 4 Sprawl Solution Urban expansion has caused many problems for the f- .V • J * V- ~ Triangle. A proposed areawide rail system could remedy traffic and environmental problems. See Page 5. Blue Cross' Blue Days Chapel Hill’s largest private employer. Blue Cross & Blue Shield, might eliminate 150 positions as part of an effort to reduce the $62 million in operating costs the insurer lost last year. See Page 2. West Bank Agreement Israeli and Palestinian leaders say they might have reached a compromise on talks that would give some portions of the West Bank back to Palestine. See Page 4. Today’s Weather Partly cloudy; Lower 80s Wednesday. Partly cloudy. Lower 80s