2 Wednesday, April 11, 2001 Campus Calendar Today noon - The Sonja H. Stone Black Cultural Center will sponsor, “Around the Cirde: Black Women and Self Love.” What do you see when you look in the mirror? Do you appreciate and love yourself for the beautiful black woman that you are? Join us to explore ways in which black women express love for them selves or the challenges. Spring Job Fair Graduate Students Graduating this Spring or Summer TODAY! 11:00 a.m. -3:30 p.m. GREAT HALL STUDENT UNION Preview participating company descriptions on our website at http://careers.unc.edu Sp insured In UNIVERSITY CAREER SERVICES Division of Student Affairs * l XC-Chapel Hill I do you agree with marty! Hear Marty talk. Today. 5 p.m. South Building. FREE CHIK-FIL-A. 7 p.m. -Join the Association of English Majors for free pizza and Trevor Nunn’s “Twelfth Night” Stay after for a discussion led by Dr. Richie Kendall of the English department in 222 Greenlaw Hall. 7:30 p.m. -The Orange County Peace Coalition, the curriculum in peace, war and defense and Back From the Brink will sponsor a talk by Ira Shorr, national director of Back From the Brink, in the School of Social Work Auditorium. His talk is titled “The Real Missile University k City Threat: Thousands of Nuclear Weapons on Hair-Trigger Alert” Ira Shorr has more than 20 years of experience working on nuclear weapons and has been a national leader on issues of limiting them and disarma ment Eljr laxly (Ear Hrri Wednesday. April 11,2001 Volume 109, Issue 29 PO. Box 3257. Chapel Hill,NC 2751S Matt Dees, Editor, 962-4086 Advertising & Business, 962-1163 News, Features, Sports, 962-0245 asp For more information on the following stories, go to www.dailytarheel.com. Governing Bodies to Hold Meeting Today to Discuss Local Growth By Katie McNeill Also check out Tuesday's police roundup. in 1 TODAY Carolina Baseball vs. Charlotte Boshamer Stadium 7 pm Women’s Lacrosse vs. James Madison Fetzer Field 5 pm MO N DAy sl® Domestic Longnecks HI iiiLJii REEL $2 Pints, 80's Night - Live DJ I WEDNESDAY $2 Micro & Import Bottles I THURSDAY FRI IV\y *2.“ 220 z. Bottles SATURDAY *2* 220 z Bowes SUN DAY a %T ent Town-Gown Spat Focus of Bill By Sally Francis Staff Writer As the town of Chapel Hill and UNC continue to batde over the Master Plan, a member of the N.C. General Assembly has made plans for the legis lature to assume responsibility if a con clusion is not made soon. Sen. Walter Dalton, D- Rutherfordton, recendy proposed “An Act to Resolve Any Controversy Between the Town of Chapel Hill and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill” to the Senate floor that could entide the state legislature to make decisions regarding the University’s rights for expansion. The bill is a security measure in case a conclusion is not made between the school and the town. It is a blank bill that was created to meet the bill-filing deadline and will be filled in later with content if the state needs to get involved. “Some type of bill needed to be filed in the event the legislature needs to be involved,” Dalton said. “We don’t know how this will progress.” He said the current controversy is similar to a parent whose two children are in an argument “You hope they can reach an agreement on their own, but if they can’t, then you step in,” Dalton said. Last month the UNC Board of Trustees unanimously approved a plan to add 5 million square feet of building space to the campus, increasing the total to 18.6 million square feet. But the town of Chapel Hill has a development regulation cap at 14 million square feet, making it impossible for the University to carry out all its expansion proposals until the cap is removed. Both Dalton and local officials are confident the University and the town will be able to resolve die conflict and that the state will not need to intervene. Rep. Verla Insko, D-Orange, said the University and town have a strong, more than 200 year history and that she is positive they will be able to work together to resolve the conflict. “We have able people in Chancellor (James) Moeser and Mayor (Rosemary) Waldorf working on the issue,” Insko Parking 2001 The Department of Public Safety is offering parking pre-registration for all eligible students for f the 2001/2002 academic year now through May 24th, 2001. Visit the Department of Public Safety’s 1 NK J website to pre-register and find out more information about student parking for next Fall: www.dps.unc.edu The pre-registration process is a lottery; all those who pre register between April 2nd and May 24th, 2001 have an equal chance of receiving a permit. So, pre-register online, and put yourself in the driver's seat when it comes to parking next year. For more info, call the Department of Public Safety: at (919) 962-3951 The UNC-CH Department of Public Safety ©lip Hath} (Ear Hppl said. “Both have collaboration as a top priority.” On Monday night, the Chapel Hill Town Council met and drafted a response to Moeser’s request asking for the University to be exempt from the town’s zoning regulations. The council unanimously approved a statement that allows the University to complete all the bond and housing pro jects in the time allotted if the school meets community responsibilities. The town wants the school to assume a larger fiscal responsibility by paying for the cost of its growth, Waldorf said. “The University exists to serve the state,” she said. “It doesn’t seem fair that the University not pay the costs that it brings to the local community.” The University will respond to the town’s proposal modifications in a meet ing April 18, but if both cannot reach an agreement in the near future, the state leg islature might possibly become involved under rights given to it by Dalton’s act The State & National Editor can by reached at stntdesk@unc.edu.