The Blue Banner Sports “Bulldog volleyball set for success” ■ see page 5 Also inside: Features “Student photographer bucks conventions” ■ see page 3 Opinions “Dear Mr. President: why war with Iraq?” by Dearborn McCbrkle ■ see page 2 Volume 36 Issue 1 The University Of North Carolina At Asheville UNCA student discovers pipe bomb near campus Michelle Dean News Reporter UNCA student Kenneth Bogert discovered an undetonated pipe bomb near campus on Friday, Aug. 23 while walking home from class. “I was walking my bike up the path and I stubbed my toe on it,” said Bogert. “I, looked down and the end of it was sticking out of the dirt. I kicked it pretty hard a couple of times and it kind of rolled. When it finally popped out of the hole I saw it was a bomb and I pretty much ran. It’s not everyday you find a bomb when you’re coming back from class.” Bogert described the bomb as a steel pipe with two caps on the ends. It was about six inches long total and it had two wires coming out of it to a nine-volt battery, according to Bogert. “I called 911 as'soon as I got home,” said Bogert. The path where Bogert discovered the bomb was cleared about a year ago for students living in University Place Apartments. It begins beside the Covenant Reformed Presbyte rian Church on Edgewood Rd. and connects directly to the University Place living complex on Barnard ave. A 911 operator notified the Asheville Police Department (APD) ofthe bomb at approximately 12:30 p.m. Within minutes, the APD notified UNCA Public Safety who dispatched officers Littrell and Harris to the scene. “We share a mutual aid agree ment with the city,” said Public Safety Chief Lou Caliendo. “If we need help we contact them and vice-versa,” said Caliendo. The Asheville City Bomb Squad was also dispatched to the scene where they used robotics to deto nate the bomb by remote. “It sounded like a shotgun,” said Bogert. After detonation, the squad used metal detectors to comb the area for harmful debris. See BOMB Page 8 Campus construction projects continue UNCA architects and officials plan to erect a new residence hall, student activity center and the Reuter Center. Student fees, private and state bonds will pay for the building projects, and construction will continue on campus until 2003. Later, Carmichael and Zageir Halls may be renovated, and a new physical plant, science building and chemistry departments might be designed. Architect incorporates classic Asheville design elements into new residence hall Sara Miller News Reporter Jessica Hensley News Reporter The UNCA campus continues to change as construction plans give a facelift to Governor’s Village, Highsmith Center and the Reuter Center. “It takes time to go through the design process and gear up for these projects, so now, with the jobs start-, ing to bid, you start to see the construction on campus,” said Pe ter L. Nielsen, campus architect and director of design and con struction. With the budget woes that plaque UNCA, many worry about the pro gression of the construction. “The annual budget really affects operating the day to day things that happen on campus, not the capital construction at this point,” said Nielsen. The Higher Education Board ap propriated $49.9 million, which will fund much of the upcoming construction oh campus. With the exception of the Highsmith Cen ter, other facilities, such as the new residence hall or parking decks are funded by private bonds and money generated by students, according to Nielsen. In the past year, students have seen both construction and destruc tion on campus. One of the current projects underway is the construc tion of a new residence hall in Governor’s Village. This is the first actual building structure of a group that will eventually replace all the Village dorms., According to Nielsen, there are 80 fewer beds due to the demolition of Craig, Swain and Aycock Halls, which were built in the 1960s. The first of the new structures houses 180 beds configured in single, double and possibly larger suite- style rooms. The new hall will take on the architectural design of Asheville landmarks, like the Grove Park Inn and the Biltmore Estate, to incor porate the different genres of cam pus style. “The campus was originally done in the sixties, and as more and more buildings were added, so were dif ferent styles of architecture. Being such a young campus, we have no real focus on design,” Nielsen, a 25- year licensed architect said. “We felt like a real liberal arts university, dabbling in everything, (so) we would have a diverse scope of archi tectural style.” The housing department’s goal is for at least half of UNCA’s 3,000 students to live on campus. Now, only 1,000 occupy resident dorms, according to Nielsen. Privatebonds and student fees entirely fund this project. In close distance to the new resi dence hall construction, the gutted exteribr of the Highsmith Center still stands. “Why are we tearing down a build ing that was built in the eighties?” asked Nielsen. “You look around campus, and you figure out really quickly that there is just no other place to put a student or university center.” Stephen Baxley, director of facili ties, management and planning, said the new Highsmith Center would double in size. It will go from approximately 30,000 square feet to 75,000 upon completion. This expansion will provide better access to student services and ac tivities. “The old Highsmith,was replaced because of the great location,” said Baxley. “It is close to the dining hall, close to residence halls and close to the rest of the campus We didn’t have an opportunity to du plicate that kind of close proximity anywhere else.” The new facility will house a post office, larger bookstore, food court and extra areas for student activi ties, according to Baxley. Unlike the other current projects, the Highsmith Center reconstruc tion uses money from the state The last current undergoing project is the Reuter Center. This new building will house the Center for Creative Retirement. “A Home to Call Their Own” has been the retired students’ campaign for a new facility. The retired students have raised a little over $3 million dollars to fund this project, accord ing to Baxley. “These people are very commit ted to their program,” said Baxley. The new 19,188 square foot build ing is located at the top of Campus Drive. Future campus construction plans include renovation of Carmichael and Zageir Halls, a new science building for the biol ogy and chemistry departments and a new physical plant. Also, an electrical distribution upgrade and information technology can be anticipated, according to the UNCA Web site. “Not only the biggest challenge, but the most fun, is to work the projects to where the contractors are doing what they need to do and the physical plant folks are sup porting that effort and are com fortable that what they end up with is something they can main tain for the next 50 years,” said Baxley. “Construction is not a three-year effort. It’s a 60-year in vestment.” Completion of the Reuter Center is expected around March 2003. The new residence hall will open by fall 2003. The Highsmith Center should be finished sometime next school year, according to Nielsen and Baxley. September 5, 2002 Yeager convicted of three felony charges in trial Dearborn McCorkle News Reporter Robert F. Yeager was convicted of three felony charges and sentenced on July 12 in Buncombe County Superior Court. “I do not feel that I should offer what would be a personal opinion as to the appropriateness of Dr. Yeager’s sentence. He did wrong and I respect the court’s prerogative to determine the appropriate pen alty for that wrong,” said Chancel lor James Mullen in an email. The retired literature professor and former director of Pegasus Press was charged with three felony counts of embezzlement and five felony counts of obtaining property under false pretense. Yeager plead guilty to all charges, which were consolidated into three convictions for sentencing. Yeager’s sentencing included an active term of 30 days in the Bun combe County Jail from 6 p.m. July 23 to 6 p.m. Aug. 23. The court gave Yeager a suspended sentence (a minimum of 18 months and maximum of 24 months) con tingent upon his satisfactory completion of a 36 month super vised probationary period. In addition to the $ 12,240 Yeager paid back during the internal audit and State Bureau of Investigation’s criminal investigation in March 2002, Yeager was required to make $31,649.87 in additional restitu tion payments to Pegasus Press, according to Clerk of Superior Court Records. Court documents show Yeager made this payment on July 12. “It is my understanding that Dr. Yeager retired,” said Bill Styres, UNCA’s director of internal au dits. According to Lisa Honeycutt, ben efits manager in UNCA’s human resources department, Yeager was eligible to retire under the UNC Optional Retirement Program. Af ter five years of service and contrib uting to the plan, faculty can draw a retirement benefit based on the amount of money in their account when they begin the withdrawal. Pegasus Press and UNCA suffered $43,889.87 in direct loss as a result of Yeager’s actions, according to Clerk of Superior Court records. Of that total, $40,844.87 was a direct loss to Pegasus Press alone. UNCA suffered a direct loss of $3,045. “The University expressed its views that restitution was an important part of all this,” said Styres. “Yeager did make restitution dur ing the trial of the direct losses as documented in the repon to the University and Pegasus Press. Pe gasus Press by far and away was the bigger victim of the two,” said Styres. Mario DiCesare, founder and former director of Pegasus Press, See YEAGER Page i Serving UNCA Since 1982 WWW. unca. edu/banner