Over 65 Years of Reporting INSIDE CLAR!ON\ Issue 1 BREVARD COLLEGE’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER October 6, 2000 Student Conservation Association... page 3 Ani Difranco.... page 4 Campus Voice on Voting... page 5 Campus Calandar... page 6 Classifieds... page 8 Volunteers “SWEEP” the French Broad By Jarvis Broom On Sept. 8 at 8:30a.m., stu dents from Dr. Jennifer Frick’s En vironmental class at Brevard College and members of the Brevard College coalition, lead by Linda Helms, em barked on an all-day 8-mile river cleanup along the French Broad River. The “Big River Sv/eep” was spon sored and organized by Headwaters Outfitters. Approximately 24 canoes were provided, 12 from Headwaters Outfitters and 12 from Brevard College. Brevard students were not the only participants in the clean up. There were also students from Hendersonville High School and other residents from Hendersonville, Brevard, and Asheville. All of the ca noes were dropped along the river where Headwaters Outfitters is lo cated. After the first four miles, ev- to dump their first load of trash, where it would be impossible to get it out of cleanup, there was a cookout waiting students that walked along the river the water,” said Troy. Two smallertires ^^}^grn at the Headwaters Outfitters, banks would retrieve the trash and dis- were also found in the river, one of ^ygj- 300 pieces of trash pose of it. Brevard College students which caused a canoe to flip over. collected from the French Broad River. “ I was impressed at how much trash was in the river considering that it had been cleaned previous years,” said Dr. Frick, Professor of Ecology. Wilderness education students Nancey Hutcheson and Perry Hughes swept behind ev eryone in kayaks to make sure that everyone was safe. “It was good to see a lot of people with little experience on the water having a blast and taking care ofthe environment at the same time,” said Perry. Overall the “Big Sweep” was a safe and successful experience for everyone! Contact Broom at broomjl@brevard. edu Photo by G. William Rickman HI Troy Mathers and Jarvis Broom were However, all the tr^h that spilled ftom the last ones to pull up during the first the canoe was gathered again. SM due to a gigantie industrial wheel The second spot was the pull^ Stop aue 10 d g g canoes and 1 saw the industrial the rest of trash that was collected, eryone pulled up b^anMrby bridge wheel, I thought it was stuck’and that Once everyone had fintshe Monarch Butterflies: Appalachian Almanac for the 16'-’ of September , T- Tanada and sustain them, tagged near To , ’ wintering locations are was found, some weeks later, at a winter roost in Mexico. How long would it take you, a thousand tinies larger than a butterfly, to travel that same distance under your own By Dr. Jennifer Frick That most regal of butter flies, the monarch, is a common sight this time of year in the south ern Appalachians. They are heading south, to Mexico. Those of us along their migration route may see power' tulip trees of our mountains on a cool migration evening, unique habitats. Monarchs in the If you get a chance to look eastern part of North America closely at a monarch, you can tell winter in the mountains of Mexico, whether it is male or female. The There the perfect combination of sexes are patterned differently from moist and cool, but not freezing each other, but the differences are Monarchs accomplish this " on • ^ i 1 111 1 ^ 1 fc* 1.1 V/j j 1. w. V — - V —- » hundreds gliding silently overhead impressive feat by “fueling up’; on any day between mid-September j^g^tar of flowers. Just a itt e and mid-October. sugary sap sends them on their way. It is nearly unimaginable that they reach their destinations, a creature so small, so fragile, should eat again until the next be able to fly to Mexico, but ^p^ing, and rely on a store of fat to millions do. One monarch was conditions, allows the monarchs to slow their metabolism and survive without eating. They neither dry-out nor freeze. They usually huddle together in huge groups of hundreds of butterflies, and I’ve even seen them cluster together high in the subtle. The black veins on the hind wings of male butterflies are thin ner than the veins of females. The male also has a black spot in the cen- MONARCH Continues on Page 7