ol|t Daily Ear Mrrf CAMPUS BRIEFS Committee plans to review and amend Student Code Student leaders announced Monday the formation of an inde pendent committee that will review the Student Code. Matt Liles, former Student Congress speaker pro tempore and student body president candidate, is coordinating the effort. He said the committee, com prising students independent of Student Congress, will review the code and suggest amendments to Congress sometime in the fall. For the full story, go to www.dailytarheel.com. STATE BRIEFS Gas prices to remain high for Memorial Day drives Tourists will face record gas prices this Memorial Day weekend, but that won’t stop drivers from hitting the road in record numbers, according to AAA Carolinas. The group’s May 26 report states that although gas prices in the Tar Heel State are at $1.96 a gallon, more than 1.3 million people are expected to cruise the highways in North and South Carolina this weekend. That’s an increase of 9.5 percent from last year, when post-Sept 11 fears and a poor economy led many families to stay at home instead of traveling to friends’ houses or the beach. As of Tuesday evening, prices for one gallon of regular, unleaded gas ranged from $1.99 to $2.04 along Airport Road and N.C. 54 in Chapel Hill. A glut of demand and a small supply have driven nationwide gas prices to more than $2 per gallon, and there are few indicators that the high prices will subside. Suspects in hit-and-run postpone entering plea Lawyers for Rabah Samara and Emily Caveness requested an amendment to their clients’ grand jury indictment IViesday, when the two defendants appeared before a judge in Hillsborough. Samara and Caveness were indicted by a grand jury May 20 on charges of felony hit-and-run, failure to stop with personal injury and misdemeanor hit-and-run, leaving the scene and personal injury in the Oct 4,2003, death of UNC alumnus Stephen Gates. The defendants were expected to enter a plea at the hearing, but James Glover, lawyer for Caveness, said there was need for a technical rewording between the charges of failing to stop and failing to remain at the scene of the accident UNC’s Department of Athletics announced on May 20 plans to donate as much as SIO,OOO from the “TVim It Blue” campaign to the Stephen Gates Scholarship Fund. CITY BRIEFS Repeated robberies plague Chapel Hill businesses Chapel Hill police are investi gating a total of six armed rob beries this month, three of which occurred in the last two weeks. A waitress was robbed at gun point Sunday night in the parking lot of a restaurant on the 1500 block of East Franklin Street, reports state. According to reports, the wait ress was leaving work at 10:27 j£m. when she was approached by tyro men. One man held up a gun and told her to give him her work apron, which contained cash and a cellular phone, reports state. ' One perpetrator is described as a, 6-foot-tall black man with a ipedium build who is in his late 20s or early 30s, wearing dark jeans and a dark ball cap, reports state. The second suspect is described as a white man with a medium build, about 5 feet 9 inches or 5 feet 10 inches, in his late 20s or early 30s, reports state. According to reports, he was wearing a light blue undershirt, jeans and a red and white baseball cap. Police still are investigating a May 19 robbery at the Bank of America branch at 851 Willow Drive. According to reports, the robber was a black man, approximately 5 feet 5 inches tall and weighing 150 pounds. He was wearing a white shirt, blue jeans, a black wig and pink lipstick, reports state. Also, Chapel Hill police still are looking for any information lead ing to the arrests of two suspects involved in the May 14 robbery at a gas station located on the 200 block of Franklin Street, said Jane Cousins, spokeswoman for the Chapel Hill Police Department Finally, Cousins said, police still are investigating three unrelated armed robberies that occurred May 9 and May 10 at different apartment complexes. From staff and voire reports. Blanchard, 60, advocate, mentor UNC professor left warm legacy BY CAROLINE KORNEGAY STAFF WRITER UNC professor Margaret “Peggy” Blanchard, passed away Tuesday at 2 p.m. at her home in Hillsborough with her parents and friends close by. Blanchard, 60, had been diag nosed with cancer in the spring of 2003. She was the William Rand Kenan Jr. Professor at the School f?| in ■Eh'-'- 4 dill 3 Jg I ■■Mb DTH/GILLIAN BOLSOVER Logan Faella, 101/2 months, watches the large crowd gathered at the memorial service of his grandfather, Nick Waters, while his parents,James Faella and Gay Waters-Faella, listen to speaker Stephen Halkiotis, an Orange County commissioner. FRIENDS RECALL WATERS’ SERVICE BY BRIAN HUDSON UNIVERSITY EDITOR More than 200 friends, colleagues and family members of Nick Waters held a memorial service in his honor Saturday. Waters, 60, director of Orange County Emergency Management Services, died April 21 after a brief bat tle with cancer. During the service, Waters’ colleagues and friends characterized him as a gruff, though ultimately caring individual. “Nick delighted in playing the role of ‘crusty curmudgeon,’” said Assistant County Manager Rod Visser, who is acting as interim Emergency Director. “I remained convinced that it was a facade ... deep down he really cared about people.” Black to pitch version of cancer center plan BY CHRIS COLETTA STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR Final legislative approval of a new cancer center at UNC-Chapel Hill could be put on hold if a key lawmaker’s plan passes the N.C. House in the next few weeks. Last week, the N.C. Senate passed a bill appropriating SIBO million to replace UNC-CH’s aging Lineberger Cancer Center, as well as S6O million for a cardiovascular diseases center at East Carolina University. But for House Co-speaker Jim Black, D-Mecklenburg, that isn’t enough. Black said Tuesday that he is putting the finishing touches on a plan to provide funding for five UNC-system research centers. Black spokeswoman Julie Robinson said that the UNC-CH and ECU projects are included, but that the bill also calls for $35 mil- Top News of Journalism and Mass Communication. “All of us respected Peggy great ly,” said Richard Cole, dean of the journalism school. A nationally renowned expert on freedom of expression, she had worked at the School since 1974, where she taught media law and courses on first amendment and freedom of expression. She also served as director of graduate stud He said that if Waters was annoyed, it was only because those around him were not living up to their potential. Stephen Halkiotis, an Orange County Commissioner, said that Waters’ stern attitude led him to be a strong leader. “Nick had this thing inside of him a calling, a calling to duty,” he said. “Orange County has lost a tireless ser vant.” “They don’t make them like Nick Waters anymore. He will never be replaced.” Several speakers commented on the quality of Waters’ contributions to Orange County through his work dur ing the past 15 years. “Nick forged ahead, he got people involved,” Halkiotis said. “Nick was there, fighting for Orange County ... lion for a center to study genetics at UNC-Charlotte, $35 million for an aging and wellness center at UNC-Asheville and $32 million for a pharmacy school at Elizabeth City State University. Though the proposal doesn’t include previous plans, such as funding for a NASCAR test track in the western part of the state, it is still likely to prove contentious if it hits the House floor and passes. Last year, the Senate and House failed to reach a last-minute deal on the cancer center when leaders couldn’t agree on a method of funding. If Black’s bill passes, the chambers will again be forced to reach a compromise, though they’ll have more time to do so. “We’ll have to get together and talk about it,” Black said, adding that the impasse caused at the end SEE RESEARCH, PAGE 4 Professor Margaret Blanchard was known for her work on freedom of expression. ies for the school. “She wrote important, very important, books and many arti cles,” Cole said. Blanchard was the author of “Revolutionary Sparks: Freedom of and every other county in a 50 mile radius.” Halkiotis explained that he respect ed Waters’ devotion to his work and his ability to complete a task. “Over the years I watched him han dle it with great finesse and skill,” he said. “He stood up, but the wind hit him, the snow hit him ... and he rose to the occasion every time.” Halkiotis said that Waters was a force for change as soon as he came came to Orange County. “He was a catalyst, he was the chem istry that brought it together,” he said. Visser also acknowledged Waters’ contributions to the community. SEE MEMORIAL SERVICE, PAGE 4 Employee challenges firing BY BRIAN HUDSON UNIVERSITY EDITOR Members of UE Local 150, the union representing employees at UNC-Chapel Hill, have announced a campaign to rein state Bill Shuler, who was alleged ly fired in retaliation for bringing attention to worksite hazards. Shuler, a former UNC house keeper, was terminated May 19, one day before officials from the Occupational Safety and Health Administrations inspected the University in response to a com plaint filed by Shuler. Shuler’s complaint to OSHA was in response to a newly implement ed cleaning agent which had allegedly caused health problems for several housekeepers. “I person ally know employees went to (the Ambulatory Care Center) coughing up blood, with nose bleeds.” Shuler said he first brought SEE SHULER, PAGE 4 Expression in Modem America,” by the Oxford University Press, which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, and also edited “The History of the Mass Media in the United States: An Encyclopedia.” “In addition to her research, she was known for turning out won derful graduate students,” Cole said. “So her legacy will live on nationally and internationally.” Frank Fee, a professor at the school, not only was mentored by Blanchard but was a friend. “Within the School and the Lawmakers want limits formalized Proposal would mandate out-of-state enrollment cap BY ALEX GRANADOS STAFF WRITER North Carolina legislators introduced two bills last week that would put a UNC-system policy of capping out-of-state enrollment into the state’s law books. But opponents of the bill said that flexibility is essential for educational institutions and that a law mandating the 18 percent out-of-state cap could inhibit leaders’ ability to make policy. Concerns among legislators stem from last year, when the UNC-system Board of Governors at the prompting of UNC-Chapel Hill officials consid ered allowing as many as 22 percent of students to come from out of state. The BOG tabled the propos al after a three-month debate, though it likely will come up again in the future. Rep. Michael Gorman, R-Craven, who sponsored one of the two bills, said increased out-of-state enroll ment takes seats in state schools away from North Carolinians. He added that N.C. schools don’t charge the full price of an out-of-state student’s education. “One of the areas it makes sense to draw a line on is students coming from out of state,” he said. “If we were charging them what it cost, it wouldn’t be such a problem.” Gorman added that the proposed legislation is not an attempt to wrench power from the BOG, as some opponents have argued, but rather a clarification of who shoutd be responsible for maintaining the cap. “There is a major disconnect between the people who are responsible and who are held responsible for what is going on in our educational systems,” he said. Rep. Alex Warner, D-Cumberland, sponsor of a similar bill, said he is less concerned with the bill’s passage than with the message it sends. “The idea is for the BOG and any one of the pow ers that be in the university system to know that there are a great number of legislators right now that are up (in Raleigh) concerned about this,” he said. The concerns manifest in the bills address criti cism BOG members might have avoided when they postponed a vote on the cap indefinitely. But BOG Chairman Brad Wilson said the clamor arising from last year’s cap debate was premature. “Just because you start talking about something, people assume you are going to change it,” he said. But policies must be evaluated periodically if they are going to be worthwhile, he added. “It is right and important for the Board of Governors to evaluate issues that have been around for a long time,” he said, adding that talk of the plan next year is unlikely but not out of the question. Ultimately, issues about in-state student access to education might be out of the government’s hands and instead be left to the whims of high school sen iors. UNC-CH Provost Robert Shelton, said that the University already counts North Carolina students as its main priority. UNC-CH admits more than 60 per cent of in-state applicants and about 15 percent of out-of-staters. He added that if the cap were made into law, it could have the opposite effects of what legislators intended. “The number one reason given by most students we admit who don’t show up: They say, ‘Because there are too many North Carolinians.’” Contact the State Q National Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu. UE Loca 150 No P ivatizatio' - End Discrown* 10 K i Living Wages. Collective Bargammg COURTESY OF BILL SHULER University housekeeper Bill Shuler (right), with members of the union representing UNC employees, protests his termination from the school. THURSDAY, MAY 27, 2004 University, she gave unstintingly of her time,” Fee said. The School of Journalism plans to hold a tribute to her in the fall, Cole said. Visitation will be held Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. at Orange United Methodist Church on Airport Road. She is survived by her parents, Gladys and Earl Blanchard along with her brother, Steve. Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu. 3