i> /1 *fev UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA ASHEVILLE The Blue B anner Thursday, April 3, 2008 www.lhehliR'haniu'r.iu'l \'()1. 18, Issue 0 Students protest Shuler OW or ViVMW A 'hiid's advocate' In Court Jon Walczak - Assistant News Editor Top, sophomore anthropology student Alikhan Salehi, on the right, debates with Congressman Heath Shuler over the Secure America through Verification and Enforcement immigration bill Shuler introduced last November. Bottom left, Ken Ashe a Vietnam veteran and member of the anti-war group Veterans for Peace, argues with campus police Officer Shannon Green after being briefly removed for shouting and cursing at Shuler following his speech. Bottom right, Shuler speaks March 26 to a packed room of about 200 community members and students. I’lUiro COl'KIl SY (II I’lTlIIC iNKIkMAIION Actor Mike Wiley during his oiie-uiau perforniauce of Brown v. Board of Education. The landmark court case overturned Plessy v. Eerguson, striking down the “separate but etpial" doctrine lhal denied blacks equal educational opportunities in the public school system. One-man show tackles Brown v. Board of Education Dylan Schepps Staff Wfiiter DCSCHEPP@UNCA.EDU Mike Wiley, in his lOth year as a playwright, actor and historian, is touring the country with a solo performance of the 1954 Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Edu cation declaring the “separate but equal" doctrine set forth by Plessy v. Ferguson as unconstitutional. Wiley makes his living as an ac tor performing one-man plays in spired by stories in black history. “I wanted to challenge myself as an actor,” Wiley said of his deci sion to only do solo plays. “I found I was having some degree of suc cess in the area.” The first play Wiley wrote was inspired by a slave named Henry "Box” Brown who mailed himself to freedom in a crate labeled "This .Side Up,” according to Wiley, In this performance, Wiley por trays more than 20 characters on stage. “With the success of the first one, people kept asking for more solo shows," the native of Roa noke, Va., said. Wiley performs his one-man play at I2;30 p.m. today in UNC Asheville’s Humanities Lecture Hall. His performance is in conjunc tion with a teaching program at UNCA instructing educators on be coming more interactive while pre senting history in the classroom. "(Wiley) has a great detil to teach future eductitors about how to present history iti a w:iy that u.ses the arts in the classrootii," siiid Deborah Miles, coorilinator for lINCA's Center for Diversity Education. The center begtiti in 1995 as a program of Asheville's Jewish Comnumity Center tind eventu ally moved to the UNCA ctimptis in 2()()-3. Its iiitii in tiioving to the univer sity is to work with students and professors on research projects and to provide stuilents with exhibits, programs, performances ;iik1 in ternships. Wiley specializes in thetiter for young auiliences and seeks to pro mote cultural awareness through arts in education, but he said his shows appeal to people of all ages. Wiley performed his play “Dar He: the Eynching of Emmett 'fill,” at the Diana Wortham Theatre hist year and received stellar reviews, according to the Chapel Hill grad uate. "I really hope people come out to hear about this landmark case that really enabled individuals of all cultures to not just study to gether, but allowed people to learn from one another," Wiley said. Heath Shuler’s SAVE Act draws heat from Hispanic organizations Study AbrOad Ben Smith & Jon Walczak Editor-In-Chief & Assistant News Editor BLSMITH@UNCA.EDU jmwalczk@unca.edu Approximately 30 protesters greeted Rep. Heath Shuler. D- Waynesville, on March 26 when he spoke to a full crowd of com munity members and students in the Reuter Center. Shuler spoke for about 30 min utes before protesters entered the back of the room holding pro immigrant signs. One said, “Only One Human Race.” Another said, “iNo Human Being is Illegal!” Hispanic Outreach for Learn ing Awareness, a UNC Asheville group, and the Western N.C.- based Coalicion de Organiza- ciones Latino-Americanas walked to the event after listening to Ada Volkmer, COLA coordinator and Mexico native. Students for a Democratic Society and a few local members from Veterans for Peace also protested. “You have certain groups, and instead of saying, ‘Let’s sit down and have a quiet dialogue where we can usually get a lot further, people get heated,” Shuler said after the meeting. Shuler said a healthy dialogue between politicians and voters “makes America what it is to day.” “Whether they support you, or if they’re against a particular issue that I’ve supported or voted for, I think that’s healthy,” Shuler said. Shuler’s immigrant-reform bill. Save America Verification and Enforcement Act of 2007, has gained support in Congress in re cent weeks. A petition to bring the bill to a vote has the backing of 185 members, almost all Repub licans. The petition needs 218 sig natures in order to force a vote. The bill proposes the employ ment of 8,000 Border Patrol agents and mandates all employers use the E-Verify program, which is currently voluntary, to verify employee eligibility as legal citi zens. Finally, the bill proposes an increase in Immigration and Cus toms Enforcement officers and an increase in the speed and quantity of deportations. As of yet, the bill has not been paired with any measures to pro vide easier pathways to citizen ship for the 12 million undocu mented people living in the United States. Shuler proposed the bill in November after the June failure of the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2(X)7. “To have more border control and enforcement before we get amnesty is ridiculous just doesn’t make sense,” said Caitlin Nelli- gan, member of HOLA and senior Spanish student. “It’s ridiculous.” After making an initial speech, Shuler answered questions written on slips of paper and read by mod erator Joe McGuire, board mem ber of the Leadership Asheville Forum that sponsored Shuler’s See Schuler Page 2 | goes to Washington Rachel Letcher Staff Writer rletcher@unca.edu The UNC in Washington intern ship program provides students with a taste of the political atmo sphere in the nation’s capital, as well as a chance to apply their edu cation in one of the country’s most demanding cities. “(My experience) has been in credible. It’s really fun, and there is so much to do, I have never been this busy in my life,” Marian Sa dler, junior psychology and Span ish student said. The program offers many in ternship opportunities in Washing ton. Students apply to programs in nearly every field or major. Ben Radford, junior interna tional studies and math student, and participant this semester, was hired to work for the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Stud ies. “They hire interns to research and talk to Congress about weap ons ol mass destruction with the focus on getting rid ol the weapons of mass destruction. My job is to St I Internship Pagi 2 ■ Features Asheville artist’s work adorns wall, canvases and skin. Full story on page 6 Arts, Etc. Hostility Friday II brings the noise back to Asheville. Full story on page 8 Weather. orix ast hy Sandy LaCortt-.