student Survival Guide Page 4 Page 7 P^O-A £ ;nr' I Serving the students of the University of North Carolina Asheville since 1982 ^ol- VII, Number 1 Thursday, August 29, 1985 UNCA awarded $25.9 million for major improvements Penny Kramp UNCA will soon undergo a •^ajor facelift — to tte tune of $25.9 million. Thanks to North Carolina " General Assembly funds ap- P^^cpriated over the past ‘ year, unCA will gain everything from a $338,000 baseball field to a $6.7 •million addition to the ^oades Science Building. > "This is an outstanding y^ai. xwi. uo, OTiariceiior- I^avid Brown. "It’s diffi- *^ult to conceive our ac tually getting any more than we have in this cy cle." Included in the $25.9 ®^illion total is $13.4 'Million doled out by the during this summer’s Session. "Special credit is due our legislative dele gation and House Speaker piston Ramsey," said °^^own. It's clear that there’s a recognition on the part of our legislators, and the UNC general adminis trators, that it*s time for this campus to catch up, and we're moving quickly.’' Allocated to UNCA during the summer session were a $6.8 million addition to Ramsey Library; a $5.6 million link to the micro-, electronics center of North Carolina and $1 mil- for Che purchase of 60 additional acres. The new library addition will double the current building's space. We are in the process of selecting an architect this month,*' Brown said. Construction will start at the earliest the summer of 1986." The microwave link will create a two-way video classroom between UNCA and and the Research Triangle Park near Chapel Hill. The link will make pos sible a two-way video classrocwi on the Asheville campus plus a high-speed "data-path" for research. "It will allow a profes sor in Chapel Hill to be heard and seen in a class room in Asheville," Brown said. "And the professor can simultaneously hear and see the class." The new addition to the Rhoades building will house the conmunicatlons system, and officials ex pect the project to take at least two years. Brown said UNCA is "cui^ rently in the process of negotiating for 60 additi onal acres of land worth roughly $1 million." "This will make the cam pus a beehive of construc tion activity in the com ing months," said Brown. Other projects currently on the drawing board in clude ; continued on page 3 Parking woes again H IN: Tfo problem!" pins sexdor Pat I^ncaster * wrestles with an I piece of fumi- certain to turn any ^*311 room into hoMe. By Dovid Proffitt Students returning to fall classes Wednesday morning faced a parking situation that makes suc cessful business owners rub their hands together gleefully, but causes cus tomers to grumble and curse. UNCA*s overflowing lots are a very visible indica tion of the growing pains the university is experi encing. "The parking situation here seems to get progres sively worse," said Rod Morton, a student who has attended UNCA for two years. The administration in stituted some new policies this semester designed to improve the situation int- mediately, and a new 125- 150 space parking lot is in the works. Student parking has now been divided into two areas: Zone "C" for cchh- muters and Zone "R" for residents, said Charles Carreno, chief of campus police. The expected crowd also prompted the hiring of two traffic directors to as sist drivers in locating a * IS AMOSr OWR: Students Siidl ^ Pfeifer uiaoad the car. preparing for another fall semp^fer at flNriA pk + u ^ an UNCA. Photos by Caroline Brown space. .hfKX SGA nominations . The Student Government Association will accept nominations for freshman senate positions this week. Candidates will campaign this week and elections for the three senate posi tions will take place Sept. 6 and Sept. 9 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Hlghsmlth Student Center. ^oml- I tuaent center• couple of weeks, said John Coutlakis, the director stationed Wednesday morn ing in a bright orange vest at the entrance to the first parking lot stu dents encountered as they drove up University Hts. "I just try to wave them on around to the Zagelr parking lot where they might possibly find a space, said Coutlakis. "After that fills up, we'll just park them on continued on page 8