%e 1 ig m le in Na- rings The Blue Banner Sports rt r \ Men’s basketball team holds on to first place in the Big South Conference ■ see page 6 Also inside: Features Three UNCA professors share their experiences in Greece ■ seepage 4 Opinions “Bringing light to our own miseducation” by Kelly Genova ■ see page 2 Volume 35 Issue 1 The University Of North Carolina At Asheville Officials try to keep budget cuts out of classrooms Kristen Willet Staff Reporter This year, UNCA has received $49.3 million from the state fol lowing a four percent cut, which subtracted about $1 million from the school’s budget. This reduction is in addition to permanent reductions to the bud get required by the General Assem bly in July 2001. “We, the administration, have made a very conscious effort to keep the costs away from the class room,” said Steve Honeycutt, uni versity budget officer. Honeycutt said the permanent re ductions, amounting to $523,189, came from expenditures, such as cellular phones, travel, temporary wages, membership dues and com munity services. Overall, Honeycutt said academic departments received a 12.3 per cent budget cut, while administra tion had cuts between 18 and 28 percent. “What the administration was try ing to do was protect the students, trying to protect the classrooms as much as possible,” said Honeycutt. The maintenance departments on campus have received a 40 percent budget reduction over the last two years, said Honeycutt. Salaries and benefits, which make up about 80 percent of the total budget, were not affected by the cuts. Only non-salary areas were affected in the budget cuts, said Honeycutt. “We were able to make these cuts without laying anyone off,” said Honeycutt. Instead, cuts were taken from ar- See BUDGET Page 8 PHOTOGRAi^li COURTESY OF GOOGLE.COM Enron collapses, stocks and pension plans plummet Stuart Gaines Staff Reporter Details continue to surface about the collapse of the Houston-based Enron Corporation nearly two months after the company filed for I' : ikruptcy. High-level Enron execu tives, Wash ington politi cians and the former Enron accounting •Irm, Arthur And; rson, have all been implicated in this growing scandal, ac cording to an Asheville Citizen-Times article from Feb. 1. “I ask Congress to enact new safe guards for 401 (k) and pension plans,” said President George W. Bush in his State of the Union address Jan. 29. “Employees who have worked hard and saved all their lives should not have to risk losing everything if their company fails.” “Through stricter accountingstan- dards and tougher disclosure re quirements, corporate America must be made more accountable to employees and shareholders, and held to the highest standards of conduct,” said Bush in his address. This comment came late in the speech, which did not mention Enron by name at all. Instead, Bush's address focused primarily on the war on terrorism and the economy, according to a transcription of the speech, avail able on the Asheville Citizen-Times Web site. Many Enron employees lost their See ENRON Page 8 Workers recx)nstuct main entrance 'Kst. ■ i f. : ,.vi' -.A'. m 'r 'SJ >■ iii"irr!!.■« pinr Tjif m v>’ LOU HORI ON/STAl-F PHOTOGRAPHER W.T. Weaver Boulevard will be under construction until the end of the school year as workers create a roundabout entrance into campus. Erin Cox Staff Reponer UNCA’s main entrance on W. T. Weaver Boulevard will undergo massive changes in the months ahead, as construction begins this semester to create a roundabout entrance, extend the greenway and implement a stream restoration project. “I’m not really sure what all the construction is about,” said Eric Hamm, ajuniorpsychology major. “It’s just kind of a hassle driving and getting around. It slows progress getting from place to place.” Most students said they did not know what renovations were tak ing place, but they said the con struction presents many problems when they try to enter or leave campus. “I think they are doing an all right job keeping traffic going through,” said Claire O’Brien, a senior mass communication major. “But, (the construction) is tearing up my car. My axles are about to drop off.” Tom Byers, executive assistant to the chancellor, said the university is implementing three separate projects on the heavily traveled W.T. Weaver Boulevard, in coop eration with the city of Asheville and the North Carolina Depart ment ofTransportation, to be com pleted by the end of the academic year. Some students said that school officials should not spend large amounts of money on reconstruct ing the entrance. “I’m sure this is all for a good cause, but it seems to me that the money could be better spent else where, like for the mass communi cation department or the art de partment,” said O’Brien. Stephen Baxley, UNCA facilities management and planning direc tor said money for these projects comes from state funding, not the university “You can’t sit on money,” said Baxley. “You sit on it, and inflation takes away your purchasing power. We’ve got the money and we want to spend it as fast as we can and as wisely as we can. This means we’re going to be doing an awful lot of construction at the same time.” While students, faculty and area residents sit patiently in construc- See WEAVER Page 8 February 7, 2002 UNCA recognized as leader in landscaping Elizabeth Moe Staff Reporter The National Wildlife Federation recently released a report recogniz ing UNCA as a leading school in campus landscaping. “It is an ongoing program,” said Melissa Acker, UNCA’s landscape architect. “(We want) the students involved be cause they have a lot of good are real ideas. We are , , pleased to re- tO ceive that des- receive that ignation and designation hope to keep and hope to going in the keep going in the same direction.” same direc tion.” “The State of the Campus . Melissa Environment: Acker, ANationalRe- landscape port Card on architect Environmen tal Performance and Sustainability in Higher Education” is a nation wide survey of colleges and univer sities with a graded report of their performance. “The survey generated 1,116 re sponses from presidents, provosts, and chiefs of administration and operations at 891 of the nation’s 4,100 colleges and universities (al most 22 percent of schools),” acording to the NWF Web site. As the first ever nationwide re port on campus environmental policy, it examines over 20 differ ent categories of ecological activity. “The survey and resulting report will help schools assess, compare and improve their own environ mental performance, and will heighten public interest in this very key aspect of educational perfor mance,” according to the NWF Web site. Princeton Survey Research Asso ciates and the N^J(T rated UNCA’s campus landscaping and grounds management programs as an exem plary effort toward maintaining an environmentally sustainable cam pus. For years, the landscaping team at UNCA, led by Acker, has been See LANDSCAPING Page 8 Student charged with possession of marijuana, paraphernalia and a weapon Whitney Setser Staff Reporter A UNCA student was charged with three misdemeanors Jan. 13 for the possession of a weapon, mari- juana and drug paraphernalia. “Marijuana is not something we deal with every day, but it is a college campus,” said Mike Slaugh ter, resident director for Founders Hall. “People do experiment.” Davis James Goldberg, an unde cided sophomore was charged with the three misdemeanors. He was unavailable for comment. Slaughter made a call to public safety when he noticed marijuana smoke coming out of Goldberg’s room, according to the public safety report. When UNCA public safety of ficer Steve Metcalf arrived. Slaugh ter gave him a blue cloth bag con taining the confiscated marijuana and assorted pipes. Metcalf also found two knives in Goldberg’s pant pockets, accord ing to the report. Marijuana is the most frequently used illicit drug in the United States, according to the Higher Education Center Web site. “It is unfortunate that anyone on a college campus is using marijuana because studies have shown that it isn’t mind furthering,” said Slaugh ter. Frequent marijuana use may be physically and emotionally harm ful, according to the Higher Edu cation Center. It is often associated with other social and behavioral problems, in cluding isolation, poor academic performance and crime, according to the Higher Education Center Web site. “The school takes this situation very seriously,” said Jerry Adams. “It is not uncommon, but we usu ally don’t see a weapon associated with the possession of marijuana.” Students who carry weapons re port more harassment, violence and a greater perception of danger on campuses, according to the Web site for Cornell’s Science News Report on weapons on college cam puses. “I wouldn’t want to carry some thing like a huge gun around, but maybe something like mace,” said Laina Stapleton, an undeclared freshman. “I feel safe at UNCA, but I don’t like walking behind Highsmith (Center) at night to get to Founders,” said Stapleton. Slaughter said that he feels safe on UNCA’s campus, and he said the students also feel that way. “There are few complaints or concerns about safety,” said Slaugh ter. Adams said all students should be conscious of the laws about weapons on campus. He said he wants students to re port any kind of violation they might have any information about. “A lot of students are hesitant to report their friends. I would en courage them to at least let us know,” said Adams. “Any kind of a weapon on cam pus is a crime.” Serving UNCA Since 1982 WWW. unca. edulbanner