Serving the students of the University of North Carolina Asheville since 1.982 Volume VI, Number II Thursday, January 31,1985 Students protest snow policy KISS mix-up causes confusion 6R0DWSKBEFER HUK STAHLEY pious a path froa pwMng lot to the Ubcaiy Mond^. By Donna Obrecht Mother nature, the wea therman, and a prankster threw UNCA a curve ball creating controversy and confusion for the second Monday In a row. When Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs Laurence Dorr rose at 5:30 a.m. Monday morning, to decide lather school should o- pen, the weather report predicted mild conditions. Around 8 a.m. an "older sounding man called an ex clusive hotline” at KISS- to report that UNCA cancelled classes, said Dick Cullom, the station's news director. The station broadcast the message two or three times between 8 and 9 a.m. Around the time the sta tion discovered the error, snow began falling heavily and road and weather con ditions deteriorated for the reminder of the day. The mlx^p outraged many students. "I'm really angry. Does Dr. Dorr know that over half the student popula tion are connnuters?" asked sophonore Celeste Plpl- tone. Commuters make up 84 percent of UNCA*s student body. "I think this whole thing is a power play on the part of Dorr," said student Jerry Vess. Weather conditions stranded Vess on campus because the roads were too dangerous for him to re turn to his home in Falr- vlew. Dorr received complaints frcHa several irate stu dents. "Some were really mad, including one guy who had slid into a ditch," he ^Id. Dr. William Thurman, professor of classics and ancient history, agreed with the irate students. '*'1 can scarcely conceive of any reason for DNCA to ever announce the closing of school, short of global war or an earthquake, if conditions of trit roads Monday morning did not warrant such an £[h- nouncement," he said. Jim Fayssoux thinks the school should do more for students with children. He had to bring his two chil dren to school with him Monday and Tuesday. On Wednesday administra tion issued a poster to Racist newspaper infiltrates campus The incident By Penny Kramp A racist newspaper pro claiming white siq>remacy and anti-Jewish doctrine stunned the UNCA commmity last week. The tabloid titled "Ra cial Loyalty" declared "It*s great to be White!" and e:iq)lain^ it was dedi cated to the survival, ex pansion, and advancement of the white race." "I've never seen any thing like this in ny 15 years in Western North Carolina," said Dr. Marcel Andrade, professor of Spanish. The source of the ma terial is the Church of the Creator at Its World Center located in Otto, a small comunlty near The instigator WTWnSHTKLD WTFBL FKOPiCANDL Franklin in Macon County, N.C. According to the paper, its editor is Ben Klassen. Klassen, a Russian imml- grant(see related story). Two men stuck the papers on car windshields last Tuesday shortly after they struck the Asheville-Bun- combe Technical College can5>us, according to Charles Carreno, director Staff photo by Sylvia Hawkins of UNCA department of se curity and services. Chief Bruce Cline of AB- Tech security said he saw two men about 30 to 35 years old placing papers on cars about 2 p.m. "We have an university policy against distribu tion of unauthorized ma terial so I told them to stop. One of the men hand- By Penny Kramp The ghost of racism walked the campus of UNCA last week in the form of a newspaper edited by Rus sian immigrant Ben Klas sen. The Anti-Defamation League described the editor of Racial Loyalty as a "kook" in an Ashe ville Citizen article in May, 1982. Klassen said his philos ophy is not pro-Nazi, only pro-white, according to the article by Bob Scott, western bureau chief for the Asheville Cltizen- Times. Klassen founded the Church of the Creator at its World Center about three years ago In Macon county, N.C., according to Scott McRae, editor of the Franklin Press. "There was an initial uproar when he arrived. There was even an attempt to firebomb his house one time," said McRae. Klassen, 65, is a Rus sian immigrant who said the Russian revolution "greatly influenced his life." Klassen, with his Men- nonite parents, migrated to Mexico and then to Can ada where he earned an un dergraduate degree in e- lectrlcal engineering at the University of Sasket- chawan. "He is a very polite, soft-spoken man. It's shocking that he is put-