The University of Noxtfi Carolina at Asheville olume 26 Issue 7 October 9, 1997 i Resident students oppose mandatory voice mail By Catharine Sutherland News Editor A newly-installed, $94,000 voice lail system will begin operating in 1 offices on campus next week, lespite the fact that over half of the isident student population op- osed voice mail for students in a tudent Government Association (SGA) senator’s survey last fall, ad ministrators and university officials support the future implementation of voice mail in student life. The main opposition to voice mail lies in the concern that the service will be mandatory for all students, said SGA Senator Alphonso Donaldson. “All we want is a choice. It’s not the cost. It’s the notion that whoever’s in charge of voice mail can impose it on the entire student body whether (the students) want it or not,” Donaldson said. However, Bookstore Manager Mike Small, who oversees the phone and voice mail systems, feels that incorporating students in the voice mail network would be beneficial to students, and the campus as a whole. “We bought a (voice mail) system large enough to include students. and, to me, it would be a waste of the software and all this computing potential not to include students,” said Small. “The university is not just faculty and staff That’s leaving out the most important element, and that is the students.” While Small claimed the ques tion of whether student voice mail will be mandatory remains “unde cided,” he urged students to make their feelings about the issue known now. The university purchased a sys tem which includes 3,000 voice mail mailboxes, only 600 of which will be used by the university’s fac ulty and staff The university also published guidelines for the use of voice mail that state “Each student, faculty, and staff member at UN CA will have a voice mail mailbox.” Donaldson surveyed resident stu dents about voice mail following the results of a survey conducted by Small last fall, in which 32 percent of resident students (or 302 out of 946) responded, with 83 percent in favor of voice mail. Out of 2,146 commuter students, 161 returned surveys, showing 94 percent in fa vor of voice mail. “Students didn’t pay a lot of at- See VOICE on page 8 Senator pushes child care Students, faculty claim need for service m mmm PHOTOS BY SARA HARNDEN Morgane St. Claire Marshall, daughter of UNCA students David Marshall and Bethany Beasely, is shuttled back and forth between parents during the day as they divide their time between classes and part-time jobs. By Veronika Gunter staff Writer Many people on campus agree that con venient and affordable child care on or near campus would benefit students, faculty, and staff who work and attend classes at UNCA, but supporters of university-affili ated child care have yet to determine how or if it will happen. “This is my crusade. I won’t give up,” said SGA Commuter Senator David Marshall, a senior history, philosophy, and political science major. Marshall proposed the formation of a committee to study the feasibility of uni versity child care at Wednesday s regular SGA meeting, and asked the body to sus pend rules mandating a one-week wait before voting on the measure to speed action, as allowed by SGA’s parliamentary rules system. Marshall and several other students met with Chancellor Patsy Reed on Sept. 25 to discuss the topic. “There are some great ideas floating around. The committee will look at the ideas and move towards concrete goals,” Marshall said. “People want to help, which is good, because the people who need this the most don’t have the time to do it.” UNCA’s Office of Institutional Research does not track the number of students who are parents, but two-thirds of UNCA stu dents live off-campus and the median stu dent age is 25. See CHILD on page 10 Chancellor's salary boost to close gap By Amanda Thorn staff Writer Chancellor Patsy Reed UNCA’s chancellor received an almost 6 percent salary in crease paid from state allocations for the 1997-98 academic year, nearly 2 percent more than other state employees. The increase was part of an effort to decrease wide disparities among the salaries of chancellors in the University of North Carolina System, said a UNC official. “In the last years, the individual campuses have had the authority to supplement their chancellors’ salaries from private funds. This created wide disparities in the salaries of chajicellors,” said Joni Worthington, assistant vice-president for communications for the UNC System. There has been a conscious effort to phase out these private funds, said Worthington. “We are trying to gradually bring unsupplemented salaries to compa rable levels of supplemented salaries. It is also an effort to phase out unsupplemented salaries,” said Worthington. Chancellor Patsy Reed, who earns a salary of $127, 605, is not the lowest paid chancellor in the UNC system. Chancellor Mickey Burnim at Elizabeth City State University receives $ 125,770, according to Worthington. “While my salary remains one of the lowest for chancellors in the state, I consider it to be adequate. My prime motivation for serving as chancellor isn’t monetary,” Reed said. The North Carolina General Assembly provided 4 percent of the salary base for raises for 1997-98, said Reed. “The Board of Governors increased all chancellors’ salaries this year, following an extensive study by outside consultants. The Board of Governors approved guidelines that defined eligibility for state employees, and provided the basis for our distribution of these funds,” Reed said. The Board of Governors is the governing body for the university system, and decides UNC policy. The General Administration is the central executive unit that administers policy for the 16 universities under the direction of the presi dent of the system. “The Board of Governors receives guidance from the outside consultants on appropriate salaries for chancellors. They use national comparisons of other chancellors’ salaries, and then make recommendations of what each chancellor should re ceive,” said Worthington. “All chancellors received a salary increase, but it was not an across-the-board increase,” Worthington said. “The overall goal was to provide salaries that are competitive See BOOST on page 8 Donation brings four-year engineering program to UNCA By Mandisa Templeton staff Writer JNCA will soon offer a “unique” ngineering program made possible " 25,000 donation from the D Company, a division of chneider of North America. The loney will go toward the develop- lent of a teleconference center that enable UNCA to offer a four- year engineering degree through North Carolina State University in the future. “We are very proud to take a lead ership role in helping establish this program in the Asheville area, said Mike Adams, the manager of the Asheville division of the Square D Company, a company that makes on-off switches and buttons. “It will pay dividends for our com pany, as well as for the community, since people will have the opportu nity to pursue a four-year engineer ing degree locally.” Currently, most UNCA students pursuing an engineering degree participate in the 2+2 Program, which involves two years attendance at UNCA, followed by two years at NCSU. The new program will be geared toward UNCA’s largest population, non-traditional students. Since most of these students work full time and attend school part time, the new four-year program would take more than four years to earn, said Cheryl Alderman, assis tant director of the engineering pro gram. According to Alderman, the new engineering degree will be a ‘gen eral’ degree covering several differ ent kinds of engineering, but spe- cializing in mechatronics. Mechatronics, a combination of mechanical, electrical, and com puter engineering, is a concentra tion rarely offered in the United States, and will make the engineer ing program at UNCA unique, Al derman said. The first two years of the program will be taught by UNCA professors who currently teach in the 2+2 Pro gram. The last two years will be taught by professors at NCSU through the use of the new teleconference cen ter, which will be located in Room 011 in Ramsey Library. Currently, the space is furnished, but un equipped. Students will be able to get help with their studies, even though their professors will be in Raleigh. “First, there would be some type of a local monitor who would be their first resource,” said Alderman. “Also, the new students are going to have to work together in study groups. That will be one of the best See CENTER on page 8