dayofSi ' Ladyunm "Of ISoinnieo. Jylieu amid UNC computers: it's a . ' n , . n Tonight in Union Auditorium Si" 7and9:30p.m. Partly cloudy High 75. VailUl) illy QUU - Page 4- - 101011 SOOiTtage - Page 5 Iff latin TOT community since 1893 Copyright 1987 The Daily Serving the students and the University

NewsSportsArts 962-024- 5 September 23, 1987 Hill, Volume 95, Issue 60 Wednesday, Chapel BusinessAdvertising 962-116- 3 UMveraty to tanM

' - it imew ro&ooM (Diem Dy HELEN JONES "We're not sure that students will individual student or lot will bear the Staff Writer be able to afford parking there," brunt," Clayton said. Construction on the proposed Clayton said. During the 18 months of the deck's parking deck near Craige Residence The plans to finance the deck are construction, students won't be able Hall is scheduled to begin this spring, not definite yet, she said. In addition to use the present 170 to 270 parking Gene vice using revenue from permits, traffic spaces Craige, Clayton said. : X Swecker, UNC associate to at - chancellor for facilities planning, said tickets, and special event parking Instead, Swecker said, temporary i Tuesday. charges, University officials are parking will be arranged, probably .' I i The multi-lev- el lot, with an esti- considering several other sources. in the undeveloped land at the corner will of Mason Road and Columbia mated cost of $12.2 million, hold Possible sources of funding include Farm 1,400 he said. hospital parking between and 1500 cars, the Athletic Department, the Educa- Street near the Mm trans- decks. "w-:'':- Mary Clayton, director of tional Foundation or Ram's Club, portation, said the deck would be North Carolina Memorial Hospital, said an expansion completed by late fall of 1989, and Swecker of P and the UNC School of Medicine, off Airport Road could provide be ready for use by spring 1989, if lot Clayton said. These groups all have additional spaces to replace the ones not earlier. Hammill-Walter- s, a vested interest in parking on South at Craige. a Tinrririniiniiiiiiriiin... Faculty, hospital staff, and stu- V Campus, she said. Winston-Sale- m architectural firm, is dents will be eligible to park there, drawing up the preliminary plans for but Clayton said she expects a three-to-o- ne Parking permits for all University will ratio of faculty to student lots will probably increase to help pay the deck, which be between Craige Village, or married spaces. for the deck, Clayton said. The and Odom student housing. The high cost of building the deck increases will be much like this year's will probably make permits for it cost $20 to $40 hikes, but exact amounts Swecker said that the layout plans about $200 per year, she said, depend- will depend on the location of the lots. should be finished by November, but ing on how much of the costs can "We would be looking for ways to bids from contractors will not be be paid through other sources. spread the cost, so that no one accepted for six to eight months.

' XX' r& I J oMcemann iiiras&Msffied. v.;A - nJ wMh reply to complaints By KIMBERLY EDENS who have filed grievances. The process," he said about the promo- Staff Writer grievances are based on 12 promo- tions. "I think it was a buddy-budd- y Another UNC police officer has tions granted during the process." - - - received a response to his complaint -- reorganization. ' Caldwell also said he didn't under- about promotions made in June, but The response acknowledged that stand why the department was he said he was not satisfied and will the June reassignments "were imple- reopening only six of the 12 positions. go on to the next step of the grievance mented with less than desirable "If six promotions were wrong, process. communications." why weren't the other promotions Officer Danny Caldwell said he The response also reopened six of wrong?" filed his grievance after Chief Charles the twelve positions to consideration, Caldwell said that he is more .Mauer told him he could not apply established a special advisory panel qualified than Phyllis Cooper, the for a supervisor position during a to consider candidates qualifications officer who received the promotion June department reorganization. and gave the final decision on he wants, and he will continue the Mauer could not be reached for selections to Robert Sherman, direc- grievance process until he is given that DTH Charlotte Cannon comment Tuesday. tor of security services. position. First draft Caldwell received the same Caldwell said Monday that he was "I'm not going to be satisfied with Kirsten Gardner, a freshman English major from Hall for her art class. She wore cool-weath- er response from the Personnel Depart- not satisfied with the proposal. "I Chapel Hill, sketches on the steps of Pearson clothing Tuesday, the last day of summer. ment as the other 13 police officers don't believe it was a selection See COMPLAINTS page 5 Medical school gets West AIDS study grant Task force to recommend renovation plan for residence halls By KRISTEN GARDNER submitted last year by Gillian Cell, administrators and advisers. special programs, such as the honors By JUDY WILSON shuts down, as in the case of AIDS Staff Writer dean of the College of Arts and A third plan, submitted by the center, for either residents or other Staff Writer patients, the result is pulmonary Administrators and students will Sciences, would designate Old East Residence Hall Association, proposes groups. The UNC School of Medicine infection in the lungs," he said. take another step Thursday toward and Old West as living areas for that the second and third floors of "Do students want special pro- has been selected to receive a five-yea- r, Tidwell and his fellow resolving the controversy over the outstanding senior undergraduates. It the buildings be renovated, but grams?" Clark asked. "Are they going $910,457 grant to develop researchers are looking for deriv- fate of Old East and Old West is modeled after a similar program maintain the same configuration. to support special programs?" new drugs for treating a disease atives of pentamidine, which is Residence Halls. at the University of Virginia. A large all-purp- ose meeting room Kuncl said another decision must that is the number-on- e cause of usually used to treat patients with At its meeting Thursday, the Old Under the proposal, women would and a smaller study area or computer be made about turning one of the death among AIDS patients. Pneumocystis carinii but produces East Old West Task Force will live in Old East and men would live room would be placed on the first buildings into a coed or female toxic side effects in AIDS patients. consider three proposals for renovat- in Old West. Also, selected faculty floor, along with an area director's residence hall. The school was one of three ing and using the buildings, Wayne members would maintain offices in apartment, laundry facility, TV "It is a concern of the students that "Ideally, we're trying to develop schools chosen from across the KuncI, University Housing director, the halls to be available to students lounge and residential space. we not change the proportion of men drugs would be less toxic and U.S. to receive the grant. Indiana that said Tuesday. for discussion. The residence halls would remain and women on North Campus," he University and the University of or more potent than pentamidine; Committee members plan to make Residents would be selected all-ma- le under RHA's proposal. said. "WeVe heard that pretty loudly pentamidine toxic side by a Cincinnati also received the produces recommendations about the future of committee seniors, RHA President Kelly Clark said and clearly, particularly from women effects," Tidwell said. "Pretty close of graduating grants, given by the National the buildings to UNC's Board of based on criteria concerning both Tuesday he wanted to retain as much residents." Allergy Infectious to 100 percent of AIDS patients Institute of and Trustees at the board's October academic achievements and campus residential space as possible, without Kuncl said that he didn't know without treatment die." Diseases. meeting, Kuncl said. activities. limiting possibilities for future uses what the outcome of Thursday's Dr. Richard Tidwell, associate Research at UNC began July In deciding between the proposals, Another proposal, submitted over of the buildings. meeting would be, but students have professor of pathology at UNC, 10. "It's early in the game," Tidwell the task force will have to resolve the summer by Robert Allen, asso- "I can't see office space meeting the made their preference clear. said the disease, Pneumocystis said, "but it's a kind of research several issues, including whether the ciate dean of honors, would establish needs of students," he said. "Students have said that they carinii pneumonia, is an opportu- that can bring quick results. We halls will remain all-ma- le, whether an "honors center" in Old West. It Clark said the University's trustees would like to see them (Old East and nistic iiifection, a tiny organism actually started initial testing of they will be used for special programs, would include a formal meeting also want to preserve residential space Old West) continue as residence halls that a normal body handles well. and how much space will be left for room, a "commons room" for recep- in the buildings, without special programs," he said. RESEARCH "When the immune system See page 5 residents. tions or seminars and offices on the Another major issue is wnether the "That's important for us to take into One proposal for the buildings, first floor for Honors Program buildings will be designed to house consideration." Residents voice objections' to proposed Pittsboro Street Extension By NICKI WEISENSEE The Pittsboro Street Extension will visualize what the extension would said. "The public should be a little all the way to Horace Williams a magnet to draw traffic through the Staff Writer destroy Northside Neighborhood, do. more objective about changes and not Airport on Airport Road, which center of the campus." The democratic process was in full said Estelle Mabry, a member of the Her comments were greeted by have to be dragged kicking and would then become a "satellite There was one dissenting voice. swing Tuesday night as 30 people Northside Neighborhood Associa- applause from the audience of over screaming into the 20th century." campus" for UNC. "I endorse and applaud the pro- about the proposed Chapel tion. The neighborhood extends from 150 people. Satellite parking lots with bus posed four strategically placed park- spoke out A couple of people proposed Thoroughfare Plan joint Rosemary Street Umstead Drive Bob Epting suggested the commit- transportation to campus was pro- ing decks," said William Kohn, Hill at a to putting Columbia Street, near University-Tow- n Committee and from Columbia Street to the tee put an "iron stake through the posed by Nancy Tally as a solution president of the Downtown Chapel Cameron Avenue, underground and meeting. Carrboro town limits. heart of the Pittsboro Street to visitor parking. She also suggested Hill Association. then placing pedestrian bridges over controversial part of the "At the last (Joint University-Tow- n Extension." ticketing illegal parkers $100. The Joint University-Tow-n Com- The most the road. plan is the Pittsboro Street Exten- Committee) meeting, someone said Several people also suggested Many people opposed the Univer- mittee will hold its next decision- sion, which would extend through the neighborhoods affected by the making Columbia and Pittsboro "This would eliminate the noise of sity's proposal to have four parking making meeting Tuesday, Sept. 29 at Little Fraternity Court to Franklin extension were not established," streets two-wa-y again. Two people traffic and allow pedestrians safe decks at various places on campus. 10 a.m. in the Knapp Building and Rosemary streets and intersect Mabry said. "Well, Northside has suggested the committee abandon the passage across the road," Bob Joest-in- g "(The parking decks) are the most auditorium. with Airport Road. been around for over a century and land-us- e plan and start over. said. threatening elements of the Univer- A public hearing involving the John Sanders, chairman of the it would virtually be destroyed by this Julian Raney, who has lived in Joesting said he had seen this sity's plan," said Joe Herzenberg, who N.C. Department of Transportation committee, requested that the speak- extension." Chapel Hill for 72 years, was the only system work at the University of is running for Chapel Hill Town and the Thoroughfare Plan will be ers propose solutions rather than just Mabry offered to take the commit- voice in favor of the Pittsboro Street Minnesota in Minneapolis. Council in the Nov. 3 elections. "Even held Wednesday, Sept. 30 at 7:30 p.m. state their opinions. The committee tee members on a walking tour of Extension. David Delaney suggested extend- though they're not dead center in the at the Culbreth Junior High School made no decisions at the meeting. the neighborhood so they could "(The extension) is inevitable," he ing the underground Columbia Street middle of campus, they will serve as auditorium. No call alligator long mouth till youpass him. Jamaican Proverb

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