All aboard ‘The Polar Express’ features ■ see page 2 „ Women’s basketball falls to Furman Sports M see page 4 Campus Drama department receives prestigious award ■ see page 3 MEX)S / NEWS briefs by Sean Robinson Stajf Reporter Student dies in kayaking accident I national Tom Ridge, the United States’ first homeland security advisor, left President Bush’s cabinet after only three years of attempting to reor ganize American security Nov. 30. The seventh Bush cabinet mem ber to decide not to continue on into a second term. Ridge cited a desire to move family and personal matters to a higher priority as a rea son for his departure. I international while promising Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin to work toward easing a U.S. ban on Cana dian beef. President Bush stood by and defended decisions on trade and Iraq that have strained the U.S.- Canadian relationship over the last four years Nov. 30. Even while thousands of anti- j Bush protesters lined the streets to I protest his visit. President Bush de- Inied that his decisions damaged I U.S-Canadian ties. In the wake of elections some are I calling fraudulent, the Ukrainian I opposition party pulled out of ne gotiations Nov. 30 that some hoped might lead Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma to back a re-run of the election. The opposition said the election for the position of presi dent had been tampered with, and Colin Powell recently affirmed a U.S. position in support of a re-run I of the election. ENTERTAINMENT The longest winning streak in television game show history ended Nov. 30 when Ken Jennings lost on an episode of “Jeopardy!” after hav ing earned more than $2.5 million in 74 wins. The record string of vic tories began in June for the 30-year- old software engineer from Salt Lake City and earned him $2,520,700 in cash while boosting ratings for the show by 22 percent over the same period. SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Patients treated with radioactive niaterial are more likely to set off security alarms because more of them are being equipped with sen sitive radiation detectors, according to a Nov. 30 report. Radioactive medications can last in the body for up to three months, according to the report. It urged patients to in form security guards of their treat ment before trying to go through the detectors. SPORTS The University of Notre Dame fired head football coach Tyrone Willingham Nov. 30 after a 21-15 record over three seasons. The school athletic director Kevin White said that the school has made the progress of the field necessary to reestablish Notre Dame as part of the college football elite under Willingham’s leadership. health U.S. researchers reported Nov. 30 that germs found in dental plaque can make their way into the lungs and cause fatal pneumonia in elderly nursing home patients. by Kristen Rugger! Stajf Reporter Brian Rueff, sophomore mul timedia major, died in a kayaking accident over Thanksgiving break. His body was found Nov. 25. “He was a really generous guy,” said Andy Burke, Rueff’s friend and roommate at University Place apartments. “His passion was kayaking. He was on the river about four or five times a week.” Kayaking was RuelF’s main rea son for coming to UNCA, accord ing to Burke, junior psychology major. “He finished his first semester at (Appalachian State University), and I think he wanted to come to Asheville because there’s a tighter boating community here,” said Burke. “That was his number one reason for com ing here.” Rueff, 20, was originally from Milford, Mich. “(Rueff) was a very experi enced paddler,” said undeclared sophomore Chris Schell who was kayaking with Rueff at Green River. “What happened was a freak accident. It could have happened to anyone.” ■f' A. -r ■tr- COURTESY OF SHELLEY BAKER Brian RuefF (center) and friends (from left to right) Andy Burke, Liz Laxague and Shelley Baker hang out at a friends apartment in University Place several months ago. “(Rueff) was a very experienced paddler. What happened was a freak accident. It could have happened to any one.” Chris Schell undeclared sophomore Rueff was boating in the Green River with three friends Nov. 23. Green River is known as a Class 5 and can be very danger ous, according to Carl Swain, assis tant chief of the Blue Ridge Fire and Rescue. As the group of boaters ap proached a section of the river known as the Narrows, Rueff paddled ahead and was soon out of sight, according to Hendersonville County Sheriff s Lt. Walt Harper. Authorities said Rueff’s kayak apparently over turned. The group, which had kayaked in Green River numerous times before, usually got out of their kayaks and walked along a trail in order to bypass this section, ac cording to Harper. Rueff s friends assumed he had done so, but then found his overturned kayak below the rapids. The group searched for Rueff until dark and then went for help. A search party looked for Rueff until midnight, but the high wa ters, due to recent rain, delayed the search until the next morning. Duke Power, which controls the water level in the Green River, low ered it so the search could con tinue Thursday morning. Thursday’s search was more suc cessful. The crews found his body about 100 yards downriver from where his kayak had beached, ac cording to the Associated Press. Many of Rueff’s friends who were away visiting their families See accident on page 8 UNCA salaries lowest in UNC system by Sarah Schmidt Staff Reporter The UNCA administration recently worked to raise salaries to a more competitive level through campus-based tuition increases after finding that faculty and staff salaries trail be hind other UNC baccaluareate univerities. Students rate UNCA highly in teaching ef fectiveness and quality of instruction, accord ing to the Spring 2004 UNCA Faculty Sala ries Report. Students also considered that in the intellectual environment on campus UNCA beat out other UNC baccalaureate in stitutions in all but one of 11 surveys of sopho mores, seniors and alumni in 2002. UNCA students also outstrip the other bac calaureate institutions in SAT scores, with the average UNCA freshman from 2003 scoring 1166 and other universities scoring an aver age of 858, according to the report. Despite these points in UNCA’s favor, the staff and fac ulty are paid less on average than other peer institutions. “UNCA has always lagged in terms of sal- sue,” said Mullen. “We’ve got certain advan- ary,” said Chancellor James Mullen. “I think tages. This is a great place to live. It’s a won- wh'at has happened historically is a number of derful academic community and a great inter- years ago, during the 1980s and 70s, UNCA disciplinary collaboratiori and spirit. But, at began to trail in terms of its salaries. The Board of Gov ernors votes for the budget. That budget is then taken to the General Assembly. It then becomes part of the state’s budget, a part of the university system budget.” Without a competitive salary to offer and with one of the higher cost-of-living areas in the UNG system, UNGA could face future problems in terms of hiring and employing faculty and “In 2000, our campus- based tuition was allo cated towards student services and equipment needs rather than faculty salaries. It turns out most other campuses used theirs towards salaries.” Mark Padilla vice chancellor of academic affairs staff. “Acknowledging the fact that we are low, and ac knowledging the fact that it becomes a com petitive issue when it comes to recruiting fac ulty, we need to take steps to address the is- the end of the day, the salary is a factor. We’ve been fortunate that people have come here and stayed here, but we have to watch to make certain that’s the case.” Some factors that may have influenced the budget for UNCA, voted upon by Board of Governors, include UNCA’s size and status as a baccalaure ate institution. Provost and Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs Mark Padilla noted other factors in UNCA’s bud- In 2000, our campus-based tuition was allocated towards student services and equipment needs rather See salary on page 8 Study links lack of sleep with obesity by Sarah Schmidt Staff Reporter BRIAN DAVIS/staff photographer Erin McDonald, sophomore environmental studies, struggles to stay awake to finish her homework. Students at UNCA disagree with the findings of a recent study at Columbia University that indi cates that sleep deprivation leads to an increase in appetite and obe sity, saying instead that their ap petites tend to go down as they got less sleep. Researchers at Columbia Uni versity in New York compared sleep patterns and obesity rates from the 1980s to base their find ings. The researchers made the as sociation between sleep and weight from records from a sam pling of 6,115 people between the ages of 32 and 59. People getting two to four hours of sleep a night See sleep on page 8 UNCA considers university growth by Rheannon Yokeley Staff Reporter The UNCA Task Force on Campus Size met on the third floor of the Owen Conference Center Nov. 18. The group met to discuss the possibility of increa.sed enroll ment at UNCA and to talk about whether UNCA should grow, ac cording to Irene Rossell, associate professor of environmental studies and member of the task force. “The charge of the task force is to make a recommendations to the UNCA Faculty Senate and to the chancellor about whether univer sity enrollment should continue to rise,” Rossell. “If further growth is recommended, we have to make additional recommendations about the nature of that growth.” Increased growth of high school graduates in North Carolina, espe cially the piedmont region, caused changes in the university system and in UNCA, according to Archer Gravely, director of the office for institutional research at UNCA. This growth was the reason behind the $50 million UNCA received for construction projects on cam pus. “Right now we (UNCA) enroll approximately 30 percent of all of the high school graduates who en roll in one of the 16 universities in the UNC system,” said Gravely. The headcount for the fall 2004 semester is at 3,485 right now, ac cording to Rossell. In the past, the enrollment figures have been de termined by fall headcount where everyone on campus in the fall was counted as a “student.” UNCA now looks at numbers by counting the number of people who represent a full-time student. This means that part-time students who used to be counted as indi vidual students are now considered part of a full-time student, accord ing to Rossell. Increased enrollment at UNCA could call for increases in state funding, according to Gravely. “We’re not funded on the num ber of full-time equivalent stu dents, but on student credit hours, Gravely. “Different programs are funded differently. It varies de pending on where the students are taking those hours. If the size of the university was to grow we’d re ceive more funding, but if enroll ment later dropped we could face having to give back part of that funding mid-way through the se mester. Many institutions have dealt with that problem recently.” The face of UNCA is changing, according to Rossell. We have a younger student body and fewer part-time students, with an in crease in full-time students. In a 10-year profile of the stu dent body at UNCA several changes are clear, according to Gravely. Full-time students were See class SIZE on page 8