Serving UNC-Wilmington Since 1 948 Inside' This issue. NC Senate candidate Gene Menitt speaks out about campus finance/3 Azaleas in full bloom for downtown festival this weekend/ 9 ‘Feel the Teal”: School spirit on the rise/13 INDEX News 3 OP/ED (; Classifieds UMCW Life 9 The Scene Study examines link b^een agression and drinldng John White The National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcohol ism recently awarded UNCW a $600,000 federal grant to re search the connection between alcohol consumption and sexual aggression. Nora Noel, James Johnson and Lee Jackson, professors in the psychology department, will collaborate on a researcl project set to begin next f that will cover an alcohol yopia explanation of sexua aggression. The project will study which male personality types, while under the influ ence of alcohol, would likely to behave more sexually ag gressively toward females. “It is thought of as brainer, but the problem is tha we don’t know how alcohol involved in regards to sexua aggression. We’re trying see how alcohol affects c processes,” Noel said. She also said that alcohol’s effect on the aggres sive behavior of some could be better understood, it could result actions taken to reduce tendencies toward sexual assault or inappropriate behavior. The study will be con ducted over five years and will involve up to ^700 heterosexual males. Those whO’participate will be asked to consume one of four doses of alco hol. After drinking the "doses, participants will then take part in an I exercise designed to de- termine how the fB dosages may JS have affected their attitudes to ward sexual ag gression. After watch- I ing a video of a uple on a first date, Noes said "participants will answer ques- See Alcdhdl, Page 5 UNCW leads system m protected latid UNCW now leads the UNC sys tem in ownership of protected prt^ eity as a result of a recent environ mental initiative. The land designation, made after the university’s involvement in the Smart Growth commission, set an enviromentally-consious example fw tfie community, administrators said. University adminastrators set aside 27 percent of its 813 acres as areas that cannot be developed. In cluded in the 219 acres are the Wild- flower Preserve, which is on canpis, and Ev-Henwood, a large tract of woods off campus. Political science professor Lee Jdinston was among the first indi viduals in the univasity to get in volved with the Smart Growth com mission, which studies statewide area growth and reports the results to the legislature. ‘The idea is to protect the envi ronment (and keep) the community from being turned into a strip mall,” Johnstcm said. Created in 1999 by the NC Gen eral Assembly, the Smart Growth commission was divided into four gnxips ccmsisting of fanners, build- CTS, elected ofiBcials, and environmen- JohnstcHi was specifically invdved in designating land as protected space. He said the commission should cre ate places like paries or areas where people could be “out in tfie trees.” “(People should have) a peaceful or placid area in an urban center,” Johnston said. The university is also applying the philosqrfiy of Smart Growth to en sure the quality of life is enhanced as it expands, said Marie Lanier, special assistaiU to the chancellw. ‘It doesn’t make sense to just say no growth. What you have to do is grow in a way that doesn’t destroy the environmenC’ he said. SGAekctions Heather Grady Students are gearing up for their sec ond year of online voting for Student Government Association elections, and turnout expectations are high. The change to online voting raised student participation to about 1,000votes, said Kris Clapper, election board com mittee chairman for SGA.. A figure, he said, SGA ls still hoping to improve upon. “(Voting) increased over 100 per cent,” Qapper said. To be held online Wednesday, April 10 through Friday, April 12, the election process will be available to students through an access code delivered via the student's university email account Once the sWdent receives the e-mail contain ing the one-time use access code, the stu dent can then click on a link provided in the e-mail. This will bring the voter to a ballot page, which is designed for the spe cific class of the student. This means that sophomores will be prevented ftxxn vot ing for senior ckss president and so forth. In past elections, some votes were taken from students at voting booths for can didates they were not eligible to vote for. “(Voting will now take) about two minutes or less,” Qapper said. There are about 40 positions opened to candidates, but stu^nts can decide how many to weigh in votes for, Clap- “I definitely feel it is going to be a . competitive election,” said Neil Watson, off-campus representative and one of the candidates for student body president ‘1 think the main goal is to show students that the woik we (at SGA) do is impw- tant, and it really does have an impact on their educatkxi.” Correction The Seahawk mistakely printed the state budget shortfall as predicted at $1.2 million.The shortfall is actually $1.2 bil lion. The Seahawk regrets this error.