Saily (Jar Hpri STATE AND NATION System leaders discuss out-of-state cap proposal A UNC-system Board of Governors’ committee met Thursday in Boone to continue to discuss a policy approved last week that would admit as many as 4 percent more nonresident stu dents to system schools. BOG Chairman Brad Wilson spoke to the Committee on Educational Planning, Policies and Programs about how to han dle the out-of-state cap issue from now until November, when the full board will vote on the proposal. Under the proposal, 4 percent more out-of-state “academically superior” students would be allowed to enroll into UNC-system schools. These students would include nonresident National Merit Scholars, National Achievement Scholars, National Hispanic Scholars and other sim ilarly qualified students. Wilson encouraged committee members to draw up changes or amendments to the exemption proposal before the board’s November meeting. The BOG Budget and Finance Committee today also will review out-of-state tuition in relation to the possible rising enrollment cap. The full BOG will meet at 11 a.m. today. Former UNC professor tapped as new UF president In a unanimous vote Wednesday, the University of Florida Board of Trustees named former UNC professor and associ ate dean James Machen the school’s 11th president. Machen was a UNC professor from 1979 to 1989 and served as associate dean of the UNC School of Dentistry from 1983-89. Machen has served as president of the University of Utah since 1998. He will take office Jan. 5, according to a UF press release. Machen was one of three final ists selected by the search com mittee, consisting of UF faculty and BOT members. CITY BRIEFS Armed men rob man in Chapel Hill apartment A Chapel Hill resident was robbed early Thursday morning at the Camelot Village apartment complex near University Mall. John Proutes Nijie, 41, of 100 W. Rosemary St., was at the resi dence of George Wayne Prevel, 49, of 130 S. Estes Drive, when two or three men entered the apartment, according to police reports. Chapel Hill police spokeswoman Jane Cousins said the men took Nijie’s wallet and ran outside to a car. Nijie approached the car and one of the men pointed a handgun at him, Cousins said. Minor injuries were reported, and Chapel Hill police are investigating. CAMPUS BRIEFS Weekend events mark Hispanic Heritage Month October is Hispanic Heritage Month, and two campuswide events will take place this weekend to help people celebrate it. Today, leading labor organizer and former sweatshop worker Marco Antonio Torres will be at UNC to discuss working condi tions and the recent implementa tion of NAFTA. Also, the Office for Minority Affairs is sponsoring its second annual Fall Hispanic Student Recruitment Weekend, which will bring 30 to 35 Hispanic high school seniors to campus. University's 'birthday' to be celebrated Sunday UNC will celebrate University Day this Sunday, an annual event commemorating the laying of the first cornerstone of the University. The event, which is held every Oct. 12, will start at 1:30 p.m. with the procession of the faculty into Hill Hall Auditorium. Mary Sue Coleman, president of the University of Michigan and a for mer UNC vice chancellor for grad uate studies and research, will be the guest speaker. CALENDAR Weekend The Iranian Film Festival, host ed by UNC’s Persian Cultural Society, continues in the Union Auditorium. For more information visit http://www.unc.edu/pcs. Saturday 7 pan. The East Coast Pipers’ Association will present an evening of traditional Irish piping and fiddling 7 p m. Saturday in Gerrard Hall. Tickets are sls at the door. For the full story see http: //www.dailytarheel.com. Compiledfrom staff and wire reports. Housing key issue at NAACP forum BY SARAH RABIL STAFF WRITER Affordable housing, resources for minorities and renaming Airport Road to Martin Luther King Boulevard dominated the discus sion at a Chapel Hill Town Council candidates forum Thursday night. During the forum hosted by the Chapel Hill-Carrboro chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, candidates fielded questions -vfcCgr' *Kt F? 1 HH wf, DTH PHOTOS/LAUREN PARKER Wake Forest coach Skip Prosser (left) and UNC coach Roy Williams meet Thursday with children at the RBC Center. Below: Williams, Duke assistant coach Steve Wojciechowski, Prosser and N.C. State coach Herb Sendek take questions. COACHES RALLY FOR CHILDREN BY scon SIMONTON STAFF WRITER RALEIGH Four ACC men’s bas ketball coaches met Thursday at the RBC Center to support Oak Ranch, a Christian organization geared toward the relief of at-risk children living in broken homes. Those present coach Herb Sendek of N.C. State University, coach Skip Prosser of Wake Forest University, assistant coach Steve Wojciechowski of Duke University and UNC-Chapel Hill coach Roy Williams answered ques tions about their careers in front of Oak Ranch sponsors. Moderating the panel was ESPN personality and college basketball expert Jay Bilas, who posed questions focusing on themes of personal devel opment and potential. “The best advice I ever received from my high school basketball coach was to never place a ceiling on my future," Wojciechowski said. He overcame a height disadvantage to receive a Duke basketball scholar ship and went on to be named the NCAA Defensive Player of the Year as a senior before joining the team’s coaching staff the next year. Town Council hopefuls criticize traffic cameras BY LAURA HIRST STAFF WRITER Eleven out of 12 Chapel Hill Town Council candidates have voiced opposition to the town’s new Safe Light red light camera system. If four or more of those in oppo- sition are elect ed, a majority of the council will oppose the sys tem, making it vulnerable. Two cameras were installed ELECTIONS at the intersection of Airport Road and Estes Drive and the intersec tion of U.S. 15-501 and Sage Road at the end of August. Mayor Kevin Foy, who is run ning for re-election unopposed, already has spoken out against the cameras at council meetings, as has incumbent Bill Strom. Candidates Woodrow Barfield, Sally Greene, Thatcher Freund, Cam Hill, Rudy Juliano, Mike McSwain, Andrea Rohrbacher, Doug Schworer and Terri Tyson all said that they do not agree with the principle of red light cameras and that they would consider removing Top News regarding minority status and quality of life in the town. Michelle Cotton-Laws, the chapter’s vice president, voiced concern over rising living costs and the inability of local workers to buy homes in Chapel Hill. “It was the folks at the bottom lifting this city up to the top,” Cotton-Laws said. “They shouldn’t have to leave this city because they can’t pay their taxes.” Chapter president Fred Battle ■ | W j 1 % 'Em Williams, who was raised by his sin gle mother, spoke of the impact his high school basketball coach had on him. “I didn't have much of a father figure growing up, so I looked up to my coach for that form of influence,” he said. These stories were appropriate con sidering Oak Ranch's mission, which includes reuniting families and pro viding children with a healthy living environment. After the coaches shared personal experiences and humorous banter, the fund raising began. them upon election. Invasion of privacy, a possible increase in rear-end collisions and the small percentage of citation rev enue coming to the town were given as primary reasons for objection. “I think that driving by them is kind of scary,” Greene said. “They look like ‘big brother’ watching us." Will Raymond, a local resident, has been speaking to the candidates about the cameras and encouraging them to oppose the new technology. Raymond brought up the issue at the Sierra Club’s Sept. 23 candi date forum. “I think it surprised some of them that it came up,” he said. “I don’t know that they really anticipated that it would be an issue in this election.” Juliano said he did not know much about the cameras until the subject was brought to his atten tion recently by local residents. “Probably the telling argument for me is there’s not a lot of economic benefit for the town in doing this.” According to the town’s contract with Affiliated Computer Services Inc., the private firm hired to SEE RED LIGHT, PAGE 4 echoed her sentiments and point ed out that black workers comprise a sizable percentage of municipal employees. In accordance with Battle’s con cern, the Town Council hopefuls continually went back to affordable housing concerns as a major issue for minorities. “I want to make sure we can find a way for people to stay in their houses,” said candidate Thatcher Freund. “Orange County has a good living wage, but it does An auction, during which auto graphed basketballs and team jerseys were sold, was held to cover one-sixth of the organization's costs for the year, said Phillip Richmond, Oak Ranch executive director. A UNC jersey with No. 23 Michael Jordan’s number in the early 1980 s— and Williams' signature sold for $1,500. This lucrative event was made pos- SEE COACHES, PAGE 4 Need for Isabel aid growing BY ALEXANDRA DODSON STAFF WRITER Since Hurricane Isabel dam aged parts of Eastern North Carolina in September, the rising amount of federal and state disas ter relief reached a total of S4O million Wednesday. But some officials say the allot ted funds will not be enough to cover the havoc Isabel wreaked on the state. “The numbers will keep increasing,” said Don North, spokesman for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. North said 969 people filed for assistance, and 11 more N.C. coun ties were declared disaster areas Wednesday, bringing the total to 47 counties. He said that for an area to be declared a disaster, Gov. Mike Easley must write a letter to President Bush once state and local resources have been exhaust ed. If the president deems a coun ty a disaster area, citizens of that county are eligible to apply for aid from FEMA’s disaster budget. Regardless of how extensive the relief funding turns out to be, North said, U.S. citizens are fortu nate to be granted federal aid at FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2003 n’t do much good if it’s not enough to live on.” Candidate Cam Hill said the lack of affordable housing was par tially attributable to the influx of UNC students into the local hous ing market. Nine of the 12 candidates vying for four spots on the council were present and unanimously sup ported the renaming of Airport Road to Martin Luther King Boulevard. Council takes teeth out of ordinance to save business Existing bars were saved from installing sprinklers BY JENNY HUANG ASSISTANT CITY EDITOR Power of the public voice and downtown econom ic vitality topped the reasons for the Chapel Hill Town Council’s gutting of anew sprinkler ordinance Wednesday night. Council members approved the sprinkler ordi nance in a 8-1 vote, after deleting sections that would require existing bars and clubs to retrofit sprinklers into their facilities. Under the deleted sections, local bars Hell, Bub OMalley’s and Treehouse would have been forced to shut down due to the high costs of sprinkler instal lation. The revised ordinance requires only new estab lishments serving alcohol with an occupancy’ exceed ing 200 persons to install sprinklers. Bars with exits above or below street level require sprinklers if their threshold exceeds 150 people. Council members seemed to be swayed Wednesday by impassioned pleas from local bar patrons and managers who spoke out against the ordinance before its changes. “Owners of bars made very strong arguments that safety is paramount to them,” said council member Bill Strom, who initiated the revisions. The ordinance originally was proposed last February, after a fire in a Rhode Island nightclub resulted in the deaths of 99 people. Town officials approached Chapel Hill Fire Chief Dan Jones after the Rhode Island incident to explore measures that would prevent a similar tragedy in local nightclubs. The initial proposal required sprinklers for existing businesses, including restaurants, with a threshold exceeding 50 people. But public complaints about its broad scope influenced town staff to increase the threshold to 200 people and exempt restaurants from compliance. Despite the deletion of sections affecting existing establishments, Jones said, he’s still confident patrons will be safe in local bars and nightclubs. “The important part is that no new bars will open without having sprinklers,” he said. But council member Mark Kleinschmidt, who cast the lone dissenting vote, said the imprecision of the ordinance language does not address fire safety ade quately. “I don’t think we should be patting ourselves on the back saying, ‘We solved the fire safety problem’ because we didn’t,” he said. “Anew place could avoid having a sprinkler because it puts in a grill.” Kleinschmidt said the ordinance should be more inclusive of other places of assembly, including live music venues such as Local 506. Council member Pat Evans said she voted in favor of the revised ordinance because she feared the pos sible closing of existing bars would hurt downtown business. “In better economic times when business would support the (sprinkler) costs, we all might have voted differently,” Evans said. SEE SPRINKLERS, PAGE 4 E \ i 'vUrf* DTH FILE PHOTO/BRIAN CASSELIA A National Guardsman removes records from the Swan Quarter courthouse four days after Hurricane Isabel flooded the coastal town. all. “We are one of the few coun tries in the world who cares enough about its citizens to have such a fund,” he said. “In most countries, it’s ‘tough luck.’” Easley was not able to comment on the latest relief funding, but his office has urged continued support and donations to hurricane vie MORE ONLINE Carrboro Board of Aldermen, school board candidates field NAACP queries. MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS Candidate Sally Greene said that while she supports the renaming, she would prefer a more unique commemoration. SEE NAACP, PAGE 4 tims. Some aid is applied for through the U.S. Small Business Administration, said Frank Adinolfe, acting public informa tion officer of SBAs Disaster Area I\vo, which covers most southeast- SEE AID, PAGE 4 3