10A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 13, 1999 Broadway Bridge, M-14 construction to be delayedL By Robert Gold Daily Staff Reporter No one likes road construction hassles and construction projects taking place concurrently only compounds the problem. In an effort to avoid this problem in Ann Arbor, the city will delay the reconstruction of the Broadway Bridge until autumn, Director of Public Services William Wheeler said. Road work on M-14 and the Broadway Bridge were slated to take place this summer. Both are major connectors of the city's north side and downtown. State construction of M-14 between 1-94 and North Main Street is sched- uled to begin in the spring and finish in September. Tony Kratofil, associate region engineer for project development of the Michigan Department of Transportation, said more than 20,000 automobiles per day travel through the M-14 section scheduled to be closed. Wheeler said one lane in each direction will remain open on M-14 at the North Main Street interchange. "Why incur that increased risk of not getting people to where they want," Wheeler said of his decision to delay the bridge project. When bridge work begins, three of four lanes of the two-bridge system will be closed to con- struct a new bridge. One inbound lane is expect- ed to stay open for traffic. The bridge extends over the Huron River near North Campus and the railroad tracks on Broadway. Outbound traffic will be detoured via Maiden Lane, Fuller Avenue, Glen Street and Huron Avenue. Wheeler said his decision to delay the project took place after a Nov. 22 meeting with state and county transportation officials. He learned the Baron Drive and Whitmore Lake Road exits on M-14 will be closed at various times for the state road work. "Residents use those exits to get in and out of town, as well as the Broadway Bridge' Wheeler said. Wheeler added that the delay will allow the city to finish road work on Huron Parkway before the bridge detour takes affect. I Huron Parkway, which Wheeler estimates will experience increased traffic during the autumn bridge work, has been reduced to two lanes. Huron Parkway operates with four lanes under normal conditions. Repairs are expected to be completed by August. "There's no reason in taking the risk," Wheeler said, referring to the having two less lanes available for the increased traffic load. The bridge construction will take a toll on the Ann Arbor Transportation Association, AATA manager of Service Development Chris White said. City buses will face reroutes and may have trouble reaching their destination on time. He said nearly 150 buses and 3,000 riders a day will be affected by the project, adding AATA will not be directly affected by the M-14 closure. "I don't know what the combined effect will be but certainly, it will be helpful," White said referring to the different construction times. White said AATA has plans to combat reroutes and extra traffic by increasing the num- ber of buses servicing each route and allowing drivers more time to travel their scheduled paths. White added that some routes have suc- cessfully implemented these changes. University Supervisor of Bus Operations Bitsy Lamb said University buses will not be redirected, but she expects an increase in traffic congestion. "It's going to"create a lot of trouble. The prob- lem is people won't be adjusted to it," Lamb said. Lamb said students may experience a nega- tive effect from the roadwork. Many HIV patients.forgo care Gift of citizenship Tie at Press said they somerimes went without food, One-third of the nation's HIV patients clothing or housing because they need- have forgone medical care because they ed money for HIV care. could not afford the time or the money, The message for policymakers is that researchers from the University of "for complex diseases such as HIV, California at Los Angeles, the Rand addressing social benefits and medical Corp. and eight other institutions con- benefits at the same time may have the cluded ina study being released today. most benefit for the patients,' said the Minorities, women, drug abusers and study's lead author, William Cunningham, poor people were most likely to stint on an assistant professor at the UCLA medical care because of competing schools of public health and medicine. demands from their home lives, such as The study's results came as no surprise working or spending money on food to officials working in AIDS health care. and shelter, the study found. "It's something that I think those of Conversely, 8 percent of those studied us who work in the field of HIV and Choose the eouble Masters Ue ree in Social Work and Jewish Commun aService. " Complete both Masters Degrees in a 24 month period. * Study classical and contemporary sources, thoughts and trends. " Attend one of the nation's top 10 schools ot social work. " Benefit tromrmentored internships in a wide variety of Jewish Communal agencies. " Utilize the vibrant Los Angeles Jewish Community (2nd largest in North America) as a learning laboratory. " Spend three weeks in Israel on an intensive educational seminar. " A 100% job placement rate. " Generous grants and scholarships available. AIDS have been hearing for yeams, par- ticularly as the epidemic has moved into communities of the poor and disen- franchised," said Vanessa Baird, acting chief of the California Office of AIDS. But she added, that it was not uniqueto HIV/AIDS patients. "I think it happens with people who are sick, period, who are sometimes living on the margins, where the choice of accessing something means giving up something else." Cunningham said he believed the study was the fistof its kind to look at the com- peting demands facing patients of a chron- ic disease nationwide. But he said, anoth- er study had looked at diabetes patients in Minneapolis, and found a similartrade-off between social and medical needs. "We do think these problems pertain to other diseases," he said. "We don't think they pertain only to HIV" Even among HIV patients, he said, the study may represent only a small part of the problem. He said the researchers stud- ied only those who had some history of obtaining medical care for HIV But as many as halfthe people who have HIV do not seek help at all, the study noted. There are creative ways toJ send packages... We offer something more reliable, use our UPS service to ship to all 50 states. * Overnight " 2 Day * 3 Day Saver " Ground Dollar 111 611 Church Street AnnArbor, MI 48104 (734)665-9200 e(fax) 930-2800 AP Aileen Cinquino holds her 18-month-old daughter, Elyse Jn Xi from Chin during the Festival of Lights and U.S. Immigration Services Gift of Citize ceremony in the Niagara Falls Convention Center in Niagara Falls, N.Y.t Saturday. Chilean election heralds democra Los Angeles Times CHILLAN, Chile - No matter what happened in yesterday's presi- dential election, Chile will make history. If Ricardo Lagos wins, he will become the first Socialist president since Salvador Allende was over- thrown by a U.S-backed military coup in 1973 and died as planes bombed the presidential palace. If Joaquin Lavin wins, he will become the first rightist president since Gen. Augusto Pinochet obeyed the wishes of the voters followin referendum and relinquishe after more than 16 years of dic And if the pollsters arer neither candidate wins th fought race outright, Chile its first presidential runoff next month. That compet reflects the advances in democratic transition, wI only accelerated since P arrest in London last year b police acting on a Spanisl warrant. "if we're going to move more slowly, those peo- ple are not going to make theirclass" Lamb said. She added that the University bus system has contingency plans in place, such as the availabili-- ty of 10 extm buses to transport students on timeS Lamb said increased traffic will be problem. atic, but added it could be worse. "This makes it somewhat better," Lamb sa referring to the bridge construction delay. Wheeler notified the Ann Arbor City Counci of his decision in a Dec. 6 memorandum. Councilmember Heidi Herrell (D-Ward 111 said she would like construction could start ear- lier but understands Wheeler's reasoning. "It seems like the only thing to do to avoid a very difficult situation," Herrell said. In the memorandum, Wheeler told the city council his goal is still to finish the project "by.- the end of 2001 construction season, as planned." Bonfire shows stability, Br Stuart Hutson e Battalion COLLEGE STATION, Texas (U- WIRE) - The soil conditions at t bonfire site did not contribute to the stacks collapse, according to an inde pendent consultant hired by Texas A&M University. Philip Buchanan, president of Buchanan-Soil Mechanics Inc. of PPHOTO College Station, told The Dallas a, Morning News last Thursday that nship tests on soil samples taken the day on after the collapse indicated nohin unstable about the ground at the boh fire site. "It was noteatsoil failure' Buchanan, who related he event so the collapse of a grain silo, said. "There are ases where there have been silo failures where the soil would fail under a grain silo and it would more or less capsize. But that did not happen here." Bill Kibler, associate vice president g a 1988 for student affairs and former bonfif@ d power faculty adviser, said Buchanan's analt tatorship. sis of the soil's role in the collapse may right and be premature. is close- "I don't think that it is prudent to will hold jump to conclusions about what did or election did not cause the collapse after every itiveness new piece of evidence is revealed Chile's Kibler said. "This will be a valuable hich has piece of information, but we wo i inochet's have any sort of definite answers un 'y British the commission releases its report I judge's March.' Kibler said the role of the ground&s stability may have been more obvious after the last collapse in 1994, but Is still may be an important factor in the investigation. "In 1994, it obviously was revealed very quickly that the ground played a LD big role when it fell because of the extreme weather conditions, which made the soil extremely damp,"'Kibl said. "They were able to treat that y mixing lime and ash into the soil to DAY make the ground a little more stable. This time, the cause may be a little P.ME harder to fix" John Weese, A&M faculty adviser k Y for the bonfire investigation commis- sion and a professor of mechanical ER0 engineering, said the commission will take the information revealed by t soil tests as a piece of the puz ( Yt which will hopefully show why stack fell. TED. "The commission will receive the information and will give it full an4 careful consideration," he said. "Their conclusions and analysis on the matter will be revealed in their final repdh along will all their findings." n Funky Celtic Wear um Made in Ireland 00 eFleece Jackets .Backpacks of this *T-Shirts century work. ,n mber 1956 ate of NewYork N!e In Lobby @ 306 S. Main Fri-Sat 12-9 Sun 1-5 Frossre ssorrisiioss. Rabbi Dennis Eisner (213) 749-3424 E-mail: deisner@huc.edu TJSC www.huc.edrt ___ r_ Carrie A. Lew maw, tsw (213) 740-2013 E-mail:amw mdusc.ua rk Hlut-jilt wma .e a 5 g m05 G r a p h i c M a g i c i a Prints from the Norton Simon Muses Now through January 16,201 Trace the career and life{ startling and original 20th- master through his print Call 419-255-8000 for more informatior Pablo Picasso, Woman with Hooetse*pter AN woks by PabloPasso0l99Est Patio PkassoArdstsRtsSodety(ARS, Thsd onhabenmnd by d SO= Mtisumandrks & katd G JsL~mat torad UnnrsityThs )hand jon Rtmenticr. The Toledo Museum of Art 1 4