t VOLUME LII, Number 1 7 Inside This Issue.. 1 The Seahawk will be back on the stands on November 30 with all your pre-exam information needs. Have a safe holiday! Who’s line is it? Creative Writing and Theatre departments collaborate on play/ 9 nother CM champ title please? ivlens basketball starts the season out well with two exibition wins under their belts /17 INDEX Campus News............ OP/ED 7 Classifieds... A & E The Scene................... Sports..... Serving UNC Wilmington Since i 94H WWW.THESEAHAWK.ORG November 1 6, 20aa Four percent tuition hike expected this fall Heather Brady Staff Writer UNCW expects to implement the second phase of its tuition hike next fall if the Board of Governors and the General Assembly ap prove an across-the-board four percent tu ition increase for all North Carohna Univer sities. Undergraduate resident students can ex pect to pay an extra $115 annually on tuition bills in the fall of 2001. The increase stems from the Board of Governors (BOG) deci sion to approve but split the tuition increase suggested by the UNCW Board of Trustees (BOT) last year. In addition, the expected increase of four percent will most likely be an add-on to tu ition bills as well. The out-of state proposal for all universities will be of approximately the same monetary value as the in-state per centage, which is projected at about $44. “What prompt^ those [UNCW specific tuition] increases was a campus based request by otff board of trustees. We needed it to ac complish several things rrwst importantly fac ulty competitiveness,” Mark W. Lanier, as sistant secretary for board of tmstees and special assistant to the chancellor said. “It will not be applied to salaries across the board riJiTioiv iixcuEASii; lUueimtion by LynOagy bim/v Students can expect to see higher figures on their Fall 2001 tuition bills. but instead to attract and maintain the best possible faculty.” The BCX3 concluded the projected esti mate for next year using data from the Na tional Center for Educational Statistics. All UNC institutions strrpassed the averages specified by their Camegie categories, which divide the 16 universities by their accredited programs, ranging from Baccalaureate 1 to Research universities. According to the Uni versity of North CarolinaAssociation of Stu dent Governments (ASG) Web site, the fact that universities surpassed the averages set by the board, prompted the call for a four percent irKrea.se. A 44 member advisory board made the four percent increase proposal ba.sed on sev eral factors including general fund availabil ity, specific campus generated incnsases, the ability of individual institutioas to manage and direct costs, the consumer price index (CPI), higher education price index and the See TUITIDN, Page 5 Heidi Bing Many doubt studenfs claim of affair with Michael Jordan Additionally, Frank Trimble of the communications studies department said that there is a notable difference in a communications major and the commu nications studies major that UNCW of fers. While a communications degree focuses mainly on telecommunications, communications studies encompasses more areas of discipline including pub lic relations, interpersonal communica tions, performance studies, and corpo rate communications. “I am not saying that the woman’s story is false [but].. .perhaps some of Ms. Kellogg’s statements may be subject to scrutiny given she both mislead us as to her actual status as a student and, in ad dition, decided to affiliate herself with a degree program that doesn’t exist,” Trimble said. Brian Fleishman, owner of Clarence Fosters, said he could confirm that Michael Jordan was “definitely” at the bar on Oct. 7. However, Fleishman said he could not verify Kellogg’s claims and questioned the legitimacy of a tabloid report. “We [at Clarence Fosters] feel the NEWS editor Many members of the Wilmington community have questioned the valid ity of a local student’s claim that she had a sexual encounter with former Chicago Bulls basketball player Michael Jordan when Jordan was in Wilmington for the Washington Wizards exhibition in early October. Twenty-three year old Melissa Kellogg conducted an interview with Star Magazine in which she claims that on Saturday, Oct. 7 she and Jordan slept together after meeting at Clarence Foster’s bar on Wrightsville Beach. The article, which appeared in the Nov. 7 is sue of the celebrity tabloid, states that Kellogg and her friends drank with Jor dan at the bar then she returned with him in a nearby beach house. Jordan, a Wilmington native who has been married since 1989, is the president of basketball operations for the Wizards NBA basketball team. The team came into town on Tuesday, Oct. 3 for a 10- day camp held in UNCW’s Student Rec reation Center. Inconsistencies in the story have led James FlintThe Seahawk In a recent tabloid article a Wilmington student alleged that she had an affair with Michael Jordan members of the UNCW community to doubt its legitimacy. The article states that Kellogg is a corrununications major at UNCW, which is untrue. According to the Student Information System, Kellogg has never been enrolled at the university and Sharon Sandiego of Uni versity Relations said that Kellogg is in fact a student at Cape Fear Community College. See Jordan, Page 4