AThe Daily Tar HeelThursday, April 12, 1990
STATE SIM
Ml MM,
HasarfoBS-waste facility could land
By YANCEY R. HALL
H Stall Writer
,5 Some property in Orange County is
included in the 2 percent of N.C. land
still under consideration as a construc
tion site for a hazardous-waste chemi
cal facility.
v:The Hazardous Waste Management
Commission is considering land found
i&28 counties for the new facility. The
N.C. legislature approved a hazardous
waste agreement in December with four
other states, requiring North Carolina
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to build an incinerator, a solvent recov
ery facility and a small landfill for
disposal of the new facilities' bypro
ducts. According to Alvis Turner, chair
man of the commission and professor
in the UNC department of environ
mental science and engineering, the
commission and PEI, a Durham con
sulting firm, examined four out of 18
selective criteria to determine a suit
able site for the facility. The decision
reached to eliminate 98 percent of N.C.
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land was made on Tuesday.
"Orange County is not in the lead, all
counties are equal," Turner said. The
remaining 14 criteria will be applied to
determine an appropriate site, and the
facility will dispose of over 100 differ
ent chemicals from hundreds of indus
tries across the state.
"Ninety-five percent of all hazard
ous chemical waste generated in N.C.
annually is treated on the property where
it was generated and is not transported
offsite," Turner said. This facility will
treat the remaining 5 percent, currently
being shipped to South Carolina and
Alabama.
The 18 selective criteria are being
applied in the screening process to
East Germans fear higher unemployment
From Associated Press reports
EAST BERLIN Farmers vowed
to drive their tractors through East
Berlin, and telephone workers on
Wednesday called a strike as East
Jobs available with the UNC Physical Plant -Housing
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only from March 15, 1990, through June 30, 1990.
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determine sensitive land areas. The
criteria include any significant arche
ological sites in the area; proximity to
state-owned lands such as prison prop
erty; and proximity to interstate high
ways, Turner said.
Many environmental groups are
opposed to the facility due to the risks
from incineration and the landfill. Bill
Thomas, chairman of the N.C. chapter
of the Sierra Club, said that incinera
tion and landfills are not adequate solu
tions to the problem of hazardous waste.
"The incinerator has to be run at just
the right temperature with the right
amount of oxygen" Thomas said.
According to Thomas, unknown
materials are fed into the incinerator in
Germany's new leaders tried to find a
formula for unity with West Germany.
An economic institute predicted 1.5
million East Germans would be out of
work in five years unless the country
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purchase from the
m Orange CoBinty
"packages," which could cause an
explosion, although the chances of this
happening are highly unlikely.
"The emphasis should be on recy
cling and reduction of waste at the
source," he said.
The proposed facilities' safety fac
tor will be a primary concern according
to the commission. "The commission
must be able to demonstrate that the
risk associated with the facility will be
one out of a million for the lifetime of
the most exposed individual," Darrell
Hinnant, executive director of the
Hazardous Waste Management Com
mission, said.
If the commission cannot meet this
standard, the facility will not operate,
saw a spurt of growth after merging
with its wealthy Western neighbor,
According to official figures, about
70,000 East Germans are jobless now.
Major parties said Wednesday they
were close to agreeing on a blueprint
for East Germany's future.
Prime Minister-designate Lothar de
Maiziere, the conservative Christian
Democrat leader, held more talks with
Army sergeant faces charge!
of murdering
From Associated Press reports
WASHINGTON An Army para
trooper has been charged with premedi-
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.
3
Hinnant added. ','
"Other chemical companies don't V
have to demonstrate this level of risk,'
Hinnant said. Many of the companies' v
use one out of 1 ,000 as an acceptable
level of risk.
Hinnant said the commission was
leaning toward a combination of a wet '
scrubber and dry scrubber for the incin
erator. Scrubbers are devices designed
to filter many of the byproducts pro
duced by incineration.
The next step facing the commission
is to examine the geological factors in ,
each of the 28 proposed sites. Hinnant ;
said the commission would have two ',
sites chosen by May 1.
the left-leaning Social Democrats: on!
ways to dismantle the nation's 4-dec-l
ade-old socialist system.
bocial Democrats want to retain a:
safety net of social programs to ease the
withdrawal pains of East Germans!
dependent on heavy subsidies. ;
De Maiziere is seeking a quick shift
to a market economy and a fast merger
with West Germany. $
Panamanian
u
r!
tated murder and aggravated assault
stemming from incidents during he
U.S. invasion of Panama, Army offi
cials said on Wednesday. ;
The soldier is 1st Sgt. Robert Enri
que Bryan, a member of the 504th
Parachute Infantry Regiment with the
82nd Airborne Division based at Fort
Bragg, N.C, according to Army spokes
man Maj. Joe Padilla. i
Under the Uniform Code of Military
Justice, the maximum penalty for pre
meditated murder is death or life im
prisonment, dishonorable discharge,
forfeiture of all pay and allowances and
reduction in rank. ,
Bryan, 42, was born in Panama and
deployed with the 82nd Airborne in the
Dec. 20 effort to oust Panamanian
strongman Gen. Manuel Antonio NorU
ega, Padilla said. ;
The soldier is not being held in de
tention and is being represented by a
military lawyer, the spokesman said. ;
The spokesman said Bryan was
charged w2h4he murder of an unidenf
tified Pahafrtnfan man, allegedly by
shooting him with an M-16 rifle on o(
about Dec. 23 at or near Madden Dam
which is outside Panama City. ' J
The charges came about as a result of
an investigation oy tne u.b. Army
Criminal Investigation Command, 3tHe
spokesman said. . - ;
Padilla said he did not know ifany
investigations had been undertaken by
the CIC of other possible allegations of
military misconduct during "Operation
Just Cause." "This is the most serious
(action) thus far," Padilla said.
We don't really know how many
investigations of a serious nature" the
CIC may have undertaken because the
investigation command doesn't release
such information, he said.
' J .
Business from page 1
William Perreault, associate dean for
academic affairs in the business school
said: "A lot of people came at this thing
with a lot of ideas about where the
school should be. Unfortunately, there
is not a perfect site for a facility of this
size. Any available space on this cam
pus has several drawbacks."
The General Assembly appropriated
$15 million to fund the building in
1989. Half was given that year with a
promise that the additional $7.5 million
would be allocated later. The first mil
lion was authorized for planning arid
architectural expenses.
In addition to these funds, $5 million
was donated by the William R. Kenan
Charitable Trust. Another $5 million or
$10 million will have to be raised from
private donations.
Census
from page-1
bility as citizens and fill them out and
return them."
Jones said, "As far as I know, die
response has been pretty good."
Leach said she had received 16 re
sponses from the 21 residents on her
hall. ;t
Joe Tarlton, a sophomore from
Greensboro, said he was not planning
to complete the census form, but was
contacted by a representative from the
Census Bureau. "It had like 25 ques
tions, and I didn't think they could
track you down." !
Steve Guarracino, a sophomore from
Greensboro, also received the long
census form. "For people our age, the
questions weren't pertinent," he said.
Accurate records of the population are
important, though, he said. ;
Wilson Chewning, a freshman from
Richmond, Va., said she had completed
her census form. "I think it's goodlto
know how many people of what race
are living in what districts to help with
voting," she said. I
Denise Hart, a sophomore from
Kernersville, said, "I do think it's
important that everybody do it. It's
.4