®be Daily ®ar Serving the students and the University community since 1893 www.dailytarheel.com SE] minor sees enrollment growth * Student split time between schools <&! Look for more stories online. Volume 110, Issue 97 Town Council Slams Brakes on Duplex Construction By Laura Hinson Staff Writer The Chapel Hill Town Council voted 9-0 late Monday night to temporarily ban the building of duplexes townwide until June 30. The action essentially buys time for the council to devise a long-term duplex regulation that would more specifically address problems in the Northside neigh borhood, whose residents have been the most ardent supporters of the duplex ban. Town Hall was packed with anxious Chapel Hill res idents, 40 of whom signed up to speak in front of the council. The opinions of the speakers varied widely. Students for the most part disapproved of the ban, saying the ordinance was an attack on the student body. Student Body President Jen Daum spoke for the stu dent population, asking the council to consider waiting to make a decision while working with the students to arrive at a joint decision. “The blanket ordinance would do harm for the students,” she said. “I would like to offer the student government’s support and help in finding a solution to this problem.” Daum argued that the problem is rooted in the Students to Give Their State of the University Address Daum, Larson and Spillman to address student concerns By Erin Ganley Staff Writer The three branches of student government will join together this afternoon to present their version of a State of the University Address. Student Body President Jen Daum, Speaker of Student Congress Tony Larson and Student Attorney General Amanda Spillman will speak at 4 p.m. in the Student Union Auditorium. “It allows the elected or selected officials of the three branches of student government to give a student per spective on where the University is and where it is going,” Daum said Monday. Chancellor James Moeser gave his second State of the University speech Sept. 4, and now student leaders said the student voices will be heard as well. Student leaders will address concerns they believe are most important to students, including access, tuition and Moeser’s proposed measures of excellence, Daum said. This is the first student State of the University Address since former Student Body President Nic Heinke’s speech three years ago. But this is the first time all three branches of student government have come together to address the University, Larson said. Daum said she hopes for a good turnout even though the event has not received much publicity. “The point is to encourage a dialogue, to get other students to talk about what they think is important,” she said. Larson said the address will enable students, facul ty and administration to see student government in action. “It is an opportunity for students to see their elected and appointed leaders and hear directly from them what they think is important.” The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. Where the Candidates Stand Rl I i JBm Against privatizing Social Security Questions Dole's commitment to civil rights; recently resigned memberships from several discriminatory country clubs Says he would have voted for legislation giving President Bush the power to attack Igq unilaterally without congressional ccwsent Supports federal funding for school construction, smaller class sizes and early childhood education programs Claims there is a need for education improvement, leading to a more qualified workforce that will attract modem industry Social Security Civil Rights Iraq Education Economy (creating jobs) SOURCE: DTH REPORTING AND BOWLES AND DOLE CAMPAIGNS Northside community, not the entire Chapel Hill area. Several Northside community residents spoke at the meeting, strongly supporting the ordinance to ban new duplex development. Northside resident Delores Bailey said the essence of the neighborhood would be challenged if more duplex es were built in the area, thus attracting more students. “Northside residents are working to maintain its character,” she said. “Additional duplexes will not help us do this.” Daniel Orisson, a doctoral student at UNC, placed the blame on the University and said the school should take more responsibility for student housing. “Northside is being developed at a disregard to its current residents,” he said. “I feel that if the University does not take responsibility for student housing, then the town’s most vulnerable residents will be affected negatively.” The debate escalated as the night drew on, and opinions from both sides culminated in several loud outbursts and tense statements from several residents. Ed Caldwell, a long-time Chapel Hill resident, ges tured profusely during his speech, which ran over the allotted three minutes. “I don’t mind students, but you have to respect me H i Mvate^aat^apawMß’ r ' i - PHOTO COURTESY OF THE YACKETY YACK A 1973 Honor Court panel listens during a case. The honor system at UNC has been student-run since the 1830s, when the Dialectic and Philanthropic societies dealt with discipline issues. UNC's judicial system is now undergoing an extensive review process. Time-Honored System Sees Change By Lynne Shallcross Staff Writer Since the cornerstone of the University was laid in 1796, UNC-Chapel Hill has held high expectations for the conduct of its students. Through the years, the official documents, people and names of the organizations that have helped uphold that honor have changed. Despite this fact and the major changes being proposed for the honor system, former UNC system President Bill Friday said the basic prin ciple of honor has never changed. 11! Erskine Bowles Democrat Charlotte White House chief of staff during Clinton administration Supports a program that would allow younger workers to invest in private markets, saying it would help ensure the future of Social Security Opposed the 1990 civil rights bill as the U.S. secretary of labor, but says she supported a similar bill passed in 1991 after she left her post Says she would have voted for legislation giving President Bush the power to attack Iraq unilaterally without congressional consent Backs President Bush's "Leave No Child Behind" program, which calls for higher school standards Plans to loosen government regulations she says have a stranglehold on businesses, especially small ones The law must be stable, but it must not stand still. Roscoe Pound Fair Music Thousands of folk music performers compete at N.C. State Fair for cash prizes. See Page 6 Senate Debate Yields No Clear Winner I Elizabeth Dole Republican Salisbury Former president of American Red Cross By Cassidy Cobbs Staff Writer Political pundits say that Saturday’s U.S. Senate debate between Democrat Erskine Bowles and Republican Elizabeth Dole featured more personal attacks than their first debate but that the candidates still focused on important campaign issues. Though parts of the debate were negative in tone, the two candidates did not attack each other as much as in individual television ads, said Brian Smith, a vis iting political science professor at East Carolina University. Smith said that in fact, much of the tension between the two hopefuls centered on their ads. He cited Bowles’ criticism of what the candidate perceived as an attack made against his wife in a Dole ad. Dole denied that she had ever run attack ads, but the Hobbled Football team suffers multiple injuries. See Page 7 Tuesday, October 22, 2002 and people who grew up in Northside,” he told the council. “You know what to do; you pass that ban on (duplexes). That’s the least you can do.” After nearly 2 1/2 hours of personal pleas, the coun cil passed the ban, emphasizing its temporary nature and assuring students that there will be new housing available when anew development, Chapel Ridge, will open next year. The complex is slated to house nearly 600 people. “I think to say that this hurts students is not taking that into account,” said council member Flicka Bateman. In addition to voting for the ban, the council also passed an ordinance to adjust the development ordi nance in regard to nonconforming structures, including standing duplexes. “(The ordinance) would change our nonconforming language so that existing structures would change as minimally as possible,” said Roger Waldon, planning director. “Any building that exists on the ground tonight would be grandfathered, or exempted, from the ordinance.” The council has scheduled several resident work shops for gathering additional public input this week end. More information can be found at http://www.ci.chapel-hill.nc.us. The City Editor can be reached at citydesk@unc.edu. HONOR COURT REVIEW “There’s a continuity of history here of stu dent freedom that has made Chapel Hill differ ent,” Friday said. But recently, there have been a few glitches in the honor system that have garnered consider able attention. Questions have been raised about how to pre serve the system’s stu- 7®% ■ Part one of a four-part series looking at a review of UNC's student judicial system. ; DTH/JON KIRBY Chapel Hill Mayor Kevin Foy (center) joined the eight members of the Town Council in a unanimous vote Monday to put a hold on duplex construction. dent-run tradition while keeping it up-to-date. Beginning in the 1830s, two student debating societies, the Dialectic and Philanthropic soci eties, handled disciplinary issues between stu dents and faculty. It wasn’t until 1946 that the student body constitution was created, adding five student courts to enforce honor on campus. In 1974, the Instrument of Student Judicial Governance, which details the Code of Student Conduct and the student court procedures, was See HISTORY, Page 4 comment led to heated debate on the topic. But discussion of negative advertising did not detract from important state issues, said Richard Kearney, chairman of the political science department at East Carolina University. He said pertinent issues were the main focus of the debate, estimating that 90 percent of the banter between the two candidates involved issues such as trade and the economy rather than negative campaign ing. UNC-Chapel Hill political science Professor Pamela Conover said the candidates did not focus their message on issues pertaining to the state as a whole but target ed rural areas of North Carolina. Smith said the candidates focused primarily on issues specific to the eastern part of the state - the area audi ence members were most likely to hail from. See DEBATE, Page 4 Weather Today: Sprinkles; H 63, L 45 Wednesday: Cloudy; H 67, L 46 Thursday: Partly Cloudy; H 61, L 48 www.dailytarheel.com Students Can't Stop Ban on Duplexes But say they were able to compromise By Jessica Bonnem Staff Writer Last-minute pleas by student govern ment leaders Monday night did not deter Chapel Hill Town Council mem bers from unanimously placing a tem porary ban on duplex housing. The ban, which takes effect immedi ately and expires June 30, was adopted by the council after a lengthy public ■ hearing where many residents and a handful of stu dents spoke against the pro posed develop ment ordinance. The council members voted against the pro posal favored by student leaders, but Dean Bresciani, inter im vice chancel lor for student affairs, said stu dents’ presence still was effective. “I think just in the nick of time stu dents weighed in,” Bresciani said. “(Council members) were waiting to see if students would step forward, and they did.” About 10 graduate students and five undergraduates attended the council meeting, with most of the presence com ing from student government officials. Although the duplex ban passed, stu dent officials said it will have little effect on off-campus housing for UNC stu dents. Student Body President Jen Daum said that because the ban is temporary and not indefinite like other proposals considered, students won’t be left scrambling for housing options. “This is a compromise,” she said. During the public hearing, Branson Page, Graduate and Professional Student Federation president, presented a petition opposing the ordinance signed by more than 200 students and faculty members. The petition contained information gathered by the External Relations Committee of student government and See STUDENTS, Page 4 Hg* i ,*444' * * t 4 t 4 “(Council members) were waiting to see if students would step forward, and they did. ” Dean Bresciani Interim Vice Chancellor